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The Hopewell Herald from Hopewell, New Jersey • Page 3

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Hopewell, New Jersey
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3
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THE HOFCW ELL HERALD Wednesday, July 5, 1950. Page Four ThtHoiweUHrU PuWWted TWT Wednesday HOPEWELL, N. J. Terms of Subscription HOMEMAKING JANET TUTTLE Bmt Advistr, FubUc Servict SUctrk and Gas Company New Method Shows Heart Ills Before Danger Point Nears ST. LOUIS.

A new means of disclosing heart ailments before they reach the deadly stage is saving many Uvea, according to Sumner T. Secret Service Men Finally Nob Fugitive Counterfeit Expert CHICAGO. After a 12-year March of hotels, libraries, railroad stations and stores, U. S. secret service agents have arrested a counterfeiter suspect who allegedly made bis money In the winter and spent It in the summer.

Agent Henry Anheier reported the 9.nl5k Tost for fttrcsft Anooanoed by Voterlaorlae A quick new test foe Newcastle disease now one of the nation's most widespread poultry maladies has been announced by research veterinarians. Former tests have required laboratory work to identify the disease. The new test, however, can be applied by veterinarians on the farm. It is similar to a rapid test now wideiy usea in diagnosing puUorum disease in poultry flocks. It requires only a drop of blood from' each bird and results are obtained in two to Ova Two veterinarians at the University of Minnesota developed the test.

Their report indicates that it is practical and reliable for checking farm flocks, since large numbers of birds can be tested in a short time. Testing for Newcastle disease is essential, because the symptoms of this infection can easily be confused with those of other diseases. The disease is highly contagious among chickens and is responsible for many poultry deaths and heavy losses in egg production in the United States. Caused by a virus, it was first detected near Newcastle upon Tyne, England, nearly 25 years ago. Since then, It has spread widely throughout the world.

If the new test fulfills its promise, it wiii give poultry raisers and veterinarians a head start on fighting Newcastle disease when the test shows this infection is present. most arm. Remove from tray, place to bowl, beat wttn rotary beater or elee-trlo mixer until smooth. Return to tray, "tea trrc turn to normal setting. Serves 6 to I.

1 MM sifted 2 onus blurTrt enriched dour 1 egg, well beaten Stt top. baking 1 cup milk powder I tbsp. shorten- tsp. eK tog, melted I tbsp. sugar Mix and sift dry ingredient and add the blueberries.

Combine egg. milk and shortening and add to the'dry ingredient and berries, stirring lightly and only until mixed. Turn Into a greased Hi quart pudding mold. Coyer tightly. Steam covered closely for 1 to 2 hours.

Serve hot witn blaeberry and hard sauce. Serves 8 to S. 2 top. cornstarch top. nutmeg cop sugar 1 cups blue Up.

salt berries, slightly Mix cornstarch with sugar and add to remaining ingredlenU. Cook (-7 mln Sdrtrw ft t. Hard Sauce cap butter or 1 tbsp. cream margarine Up. vanilla, 1 cup confeo- lemon or almond doner's sugar extract Cream butter or margarine, gradually best in sugar, cream and flavoring.

Beat until fluffy. Pile lightly in serving dish and chOl until Arm. Serves 8 to 8. Blickbsrriss with Custard Sauce 1 pint black- eg cup sugar 1 cups milk Up.salt Up. vanilla Combine blackberries and 4 cup sugar, let stand 30 minutes.

Blend remaining Vi cup sugar, salt and eggs in top of double boiler. Add milk slowly. Cook over hot water, stirring constantly, until mixture coats spoon. Add vanilla, cool. Spoon blackberries into 6 sherbet glasses, pour custard over berries.

Serves 6. Oregon Indians Before the coming of white men, historians say what Is now the state of Oregon was the home of more than 60 tirbes of Indians. Most of them were west of the Oregon Indians are contained within the Umatilla, Klamath and Warm Springs reservations, east of the Cascades. BERRYTIMEI Berries are to season sein. ff; done ripe red stwberflss.

sweet iii kuu iuiv nued blueberries and hueklebinles, Juicy blackberries. I could go on and oo about nature's goodness. Bat your All wlille they last The enticing berry ittiyvs tun will mwtuM your lato print and seamier mesas are limitless. Hare wonderful time preparing, serving and satin these berry delicacies! Fresh Berry PI onn rl at.) fresh berries 1 tbso. butter or to 1 cup sugar margarine 4 tbsp.

enriched Pastry for 1 flour doable crest pi I Up. quick-cook- ins tsploca Select fresh ripe berries dm berries, raspberries, blueberries, blackberries, or loganberries, etc). Wash, pick over, remove stems and hulls. Drain. Use the smaller or Umr amount of sugar according to the sweetness of the fruit Voir tan berries may reoulTe even more sugar (up to ltf cups tor 1 ut berries).

Fill asii7lI-icC pan -rftb berries. ling them with sugar and flour mixed. Sprinkle OTer when half the berries are In pan and again toward top. Sprinkle with cinnamon and dot with butter or margarine. If fruit Is dry, sprinkle with 1 or 2 tbsp.

water. Cover with top crust. Bate at 4WF. for 10 minutes. Reduce temperature to 350F.

tor 30-35 minutes. Serves to 8. Red Raspberry Ice Cream 1 pt red rasp- 2 tbsp. light berries corn syrup cup sugar 1-cup Heavy cup milk cream, whipped 1 tbsp. lemon Juice Turn control dial of automatic refrigerator to coldest setting.

Crush' raspberries, add let stand 1 hour. Add milk, lemon juice and corn syrup. Fold in whipped cream. Place In tray and freeze until mixture Is al Piople Safer Than Animal In Germ War, Doefor Says If another war should come, America's herds and flocks might be easy targets for test-tube warfare, but the danger is not as great as tmitnists nave claimed. I This is the word from a man who directed some of the nation's war- 1 time preparations for defending the livestock industry against possible "germ" warfare.

He is Dr. R. A. Kelser, former chief of the Army Veterinary Corps and now dean of the School of Veterinary' Medicine, "University of Pennsylvania. In an address before the Hew Jersey Veterinary Medical Society at Trenton, N.

Dr. Kelser declared that "there is no justification whatever for some of the predictions of vast potentialities and dire results inherent in biological warfare." "On the other hand," he said, "an attitude of complete complacency and the assumption that nothing of consequence could be accomplished through biological warfare also would be a mistake." If such warfare were waged, people would have a better chance of surviving it than ainmals in farm herds and flocks, he pointed out. The spread of an infectious disease in human beings usually is more or less limited to the family unit, Also, people can be alerted Quickly to protect themselves against health threats. Animals, however, ordinarily live in large herds, droves, or flocks, sharing the same grounds, quarters, and feed with the result that infectious germs can spread rapidly among them and strike down large numbers at once. "Moreover," Dr.

Kelser added, "getting contaminated or infected feed aiiimais would oiler less difficulty and less risk of detection than would be the case with man." Moth-Proof With Paper Even a hungry moth isn't interested in eating paper so you can protect woolen garments just by wrapping them in airtight paper bags. It's especially important to have the wrapping airtight because moths can get through small open-mgs-to the wool material. A good way to seal paper bags is to put paper tape or transparent tape over all orjenings and seams Then hang the wrapped garments in a cool place if possible. Tear. OO 6 mootiM l-W E.

V. SAVIBGE, Editor and Proprietor Entered second clut matter April 10, 1914. at post office Hopewell, Nfw Jersey, under the act of Maron 3, im. ADVEP.T!!MC "AT 3 Reading Notice, 20 cents per line oa first pace. Minimum Mrg we.

Cards at Thanks, 1140. Resolutions of Renteot. Con4otene S3.00. Crliilot TTiws 'HomUm' Show Handicap Triumph. WASHINGTON.

Some "hopeless" cripples showed why there's plenty of room lor jy handicapped person to have hope. A man with one leg ran a creditable 60-yard dash. A man with only two stumps for legs, and with no control over either not only walked, but also climbed a stair. A man who had nut on the second his two ertifical less recently walked jauntily across the room. All this was part of a demonstra.

tlon at the national Conference on workmen's compensation and re habilitation. It illustrated a change that has come over the thinking on the proper treatment for cripples, in the old days a man with no legs, for example, was taught a job in which he needed no legs. Now the theory is to give him legs and teach him to stand Dr. Henry H. Kessler.

West Orange, N. and Dr. Josephine J. Buchanan, Fisherville. Va.

showed what hard work and patience on the part of both the patients and the doctors can do Charles Cook, 30, Keen Mountain, hurt his back in a mine accident in 943. Paralyzed from the hips down, he couldn't walk for five years. Then the United Mine Workers welfare fund paid for an operation and for instruction at the Pishers-ville Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation center1. "Charlie fell down in the hotel today," Dr. Buchanan said, "and everyone rushed to pick him up.

leave him I said, 'Charlie 'can get up by Charlie got up by himself. naooea same noDber Has LongTlm Record ST LOUIS. 62-year-old man captured by a woman bank teller has been involved in bank thefts amounting to more than a milliard the. federal bureau of investigation reported. --William R.

Evans was charged with larceny of a bank. Miss Audrey Lorenzen, a blond bank teller, captured him with the help of a passerby. She chased Evans through downtown streets after more than $1,500 was token fiorn her bank. FBI agent Gerald B. Norris called Evans a notorious "stick man" one who puts chewing gum or sticky paper on the end of a stick to help grab money in tellers cages Norris said that Evans has a criminal record dating back to 1907, including involvement a $590,000 bond theft from the Bank of Manhattan in 1936.

Evans denied the St Louis theft. He suffered a heart attack following the chase. Atom Bombing Survivors Appear Now Out of Danpr WASHINGTON. After more than five years, survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki appear to be out of danger. Very few of the dreaded delayed effects have appeared, according to reports to the atomic energy com- A thorough study of the blood picture of the survivors was made last year.

There was a sbght decrees: nojmaj in oow red blood cells and various types of white cells, but this was not sufficient to affect general health. Almost the same picture obtained in the Japanese city of Kure, which suffered no atomic bombardment. A good many babies have been born in both A-bombed cities since 1945. There were predictions that children of the bomb victims would show a high percentage of deformity. This has not been the case There was only one significant positive finding reported bv a team of doctors headed by Dr.

David Cogan of Harvard university. They detected 10 cases of cataracts of the eyes which were undoubtedly due to radiation. Accepting those examined as a fair sample, it is predicted that about 6 per cent of all those within 1,000 yards of the center of the explosion eventually will develop such cataracts, which lead to blindness. "Otherwise," says the report, "those surviving the acute effects of radiation can expect a reasonably normal life." It is stressed, however, that it may still be too early to make this prediction with complete assurance. There is reason to suppose that there will be a somewhat greater amount of leukemia, the incurable "blood cancer," as the years go by.

Pike, acting chairman of tne atomic energy commission. Pike said the method was developed only recently in an atom-radiation study. "A little piece or research urns had no connection with atomic energy has produced what looks like the most highly important discovery in the history of heart disease," Pike said. He explained that University of California scientists were studying the effect of radiation on the Wood of rabbits when they noticed that-certain molecules in the blood meant incipient hardening of til arteries. Pike said the telltale molecules now can be separated from other constituents of the blood by whirling a blood sample around in a centri- When the heart trouble is detected in its incipient stage, it can speedily be corrected by dieting," Pike added.

He- said after the test was found to work with rabbits, it was tried on 104 "cardiac ftbmans" and 103 responded to the diagnosis. "This means a complete, definite diagnosis of the principal giuup ol heart diseases with better than 98 per cent accuracy," Pike asserted. Reiki Cop Oreatlng Gn-tic for Fun of It SAN DIEGO. A rookie poUce-man who told authorities he "got a bang" out of hearing sirens aas accused of creating crimes and finally shooting himself to add realism to a phony bandit scare. Stanton G.

Miller, 28, a marine corps war veteran, was quoted by Sheriff Bert Strand as admitting that while he wore a patrolman's uniform at suburban El Cajon: He set a haystack afire and started two brush fires. Made false robbery and burglary reports. And last night shot-himself in the calf of his left leg, and reported he was wounded by one of four men in a car he had stopped for a traffic violation. Miller was jailed, charged with making false reports a misdemeanor punishable by a maximum jail term of six months and $500 fine. 'Veep Means Little to Cab Driver Giving Him Direction NORFOLK, "Veep" dldn't mean a thing to this man and it happened this way: When the stout; worried gentle-aan-ib-the-epor ty convertible asked cab driver Oscar Osmund the way from Little Creek to Norfolk, he got his answer.

Not, however, before Osmund had pressed him into service as an assistant in the greasy Job of checking the oil in his cab. That job accomplished, Osmund led the gentleman and his woman driver to a Norfolk ferry dock. He got $5 for his pains. Then he found out just who the assistant ofl Checker was. It was Vice-President Alben Barkley.

The. driver was Mrs. Barkley. En route to Washington, they had lost their way. Osmund wasn't impressed.

"Who's Vice-President BarkleyT" he asked More Phoney Money Pushed In 1949, Report States WASHINGTON. Secret Service Chief U. E. Baughman has reported public losses from counterfeiting more than tripled from 1948 to 1949, jumping from $190,133 to $851,445. This marked the highest peak in phoney money deals since 1935 when the pubUc lost a record $1,037,785, he said.

Another $703,423 in bogus bills was seized by Secret Service agents before it could be passed. Baughman said in a report to the secretary of the treasury on 1949 operations. He reported also an Increase in forgeries of treasury checks and savings bonds. Operations against counterfeiters brought 478 arrests in 1949. Some suspects had not yet been tried, but 273 persons were convicted on counterfeiting charges last year, the report said.

Americans' Convenlne Out ta Enwty Hamming CINCINNATI, conveniences and comforts that Americans enjoy are due primarily to man's ability to harness the energy of nature to satisfy his demands That's the conclusion of Dr. Isay Balinkm, associate professor of experimental physics in the' University rf Cincinnati's college engineering. His statement was made at the opening lecture to high school honor students In an application of physical sciences sertfes. "It is estimated Vhat in 1949 every person in the United States used more than 1,600 kilowatt hours of energy," Dr. Ballnkin said.

1 Advertise in This Paper crrct of Hag Ilcdui, C7, Sweuibli alien, on charges of making ana possessing counterfeit money. He described Hedln as a "lone wolf" who had been trailed by agents Y.G.kiiis in icidys uniii he was found in a two-room Chicago apart ment with paper and plates for bank notes. "I knew you'd get me sooner or later," agents quoted him. Anheier said Hedln was convicted at Detroit in 1927 on a counterfeiting charge, served in prison until 1930, and in 1938 came to Chicago and was believed to have started making notes again. Agents said the notes allegedly made by Hedin were difficult even for banks to detect.

Hedin was unmarried and worked alone, agents said. He never stayed long in one place. Agents who were trailing him sometimes sat beside him at libraries and watched him read books on metals and papers, but never could find him with evidence Last November, however, they discovered that he had Invested in some real estate in Grayslake, ID. When he wrote to a real-estate agent about delinquent payments, they closed in. following him to a hotel in St.

Louis and finally to Chicago. Anheier said Hedin was working on a plate for a $5 note when agents entered his hideout, and that they found 10 other plates and paper for 100 notes in his rooms. California's Antelope Given Chance to Survive In the lonely, rugged terrain of south-eastern Mono county, the remnants of California's aboriginal herd of half-a-million antelope are being given another chance to hold their own against the inroads of civilization. The division of fish and game has announced completion Of a trapping and transplanting operation which moved 50 antelope from their Lassen county home to a less crowded area once inhabited by their ancestors. The 230-mile truck trip through Nevada brought the prong-horns to their new Benton Meadows residence in good condition Sixty-five of the colorful animals were trapped during one month in the lava bed plains east of Susan-ville.

Of the total, two were earmarked for display In the city of Sacramento zoo, two escaped, five were casualties, and Jectrrt-WcSBser'aavanced age. Assistant game manager Bert F. Knowles, leader of the federal aid Pittman Robertson project, reported that the release supple, ments a similar transplanting expedition effected by the state agency in the winter of 1946-47. At that time, 32 antelope were released in Mono county. The speedy animals are trapped on over-grazed ranges in northeastern California with the aid of an airplane Herded, sorted, and loaded, they are then token in flatbed stake trucks for release in more suitable habitat.

In the past century, agricultural development has driven the once abundant antelope into the remote lava bed and woodland country behind the high Sierra, Here, on narrowing ranges, the decimated herds have held their own under the watchful eyes of state employees Production ofU.S. Mint Tallied for 151 Years From 1792 until the end of December, 1949, Uncle Sam minted more than seven billion in gold, silver and minor coinage, with a total of 319.502,294 pounds, The first coins in the United' Siaies inmt were struck on OctoDer 9, 1792, in the presence of George and Martha Washington, the Alexander Hamiltons and Thomas Jefferson. The first coins were less than a half-inch in and each was known as a "half a disme." One side showed a woman, symbolic of Liberty and probably a likeness of Martha Washington. On the other side was an eagle on wing with the legend "Unl. States of America." The presses and steel dies had arrived from France shortly before.

At first there was a considerable silver shortage which necessitated General Washington's contribution of S100 worth of -silver plate from Mount Vernon, The plate was then melted into bars, rolled out into thin strips and cut into blank discs. More than four and one-half billion in gold coinage of 6,342 tons was struck off until May, 1933, when the last gold coin was minted. However, over two billion dollars in silver coinage and about 399 million dellais in nickels and copper cento have left United States mints at the end of 1949. All told, 31,141,346,843 pieces with a total value of $7,131,813,414.41 in U.S. coinage has been struck oft In the past 157 years.

Police Find, and Deliver Stolen Car; Owner Sleeps MILWAUKEE, WIS. A former New Yorker who had lived here only two months got a sample of the efficiency of Milwaukee police recently. So impressed was the new Mitwaukeean, Adolph Mandl, that he telephoned the newspaper to tell about it. "Imagine," said Mandl "They woke me up and said my car had been stolen and they had recovered it. I didn't even know it was stolen.

Not only that, but they were extremely courteous. Extremely courteous." Mandl's oar had been parked in front of his apartment. The thief lacking an ignition key, tried to start it by crossing the wires. Unsuccessful, he stopped a taxicab driver and asked for a push. The cabby pushed the car for blocks, but it wouldn't start.

Disgusted, the cabby halted. He lifted the car hood and looked at the engine. He saw the vi-ajw tmci aim cunciuaeo. that he had been aiding a thief. He stalled, hoping a policeman might come along.

When Patrolman Joseph Mis--zewaki chanced to come by a few minutes later, the cabby- balled. "fflE The thief ran. The policeman and the cabby couldn't overtake him. Patrolman Mlszewskl notified the' detective bureau. The license number was checked.

A few minutes later. Parrot men Raymond Bednarek and Henry Kubiak were on theii way to Mandl's apartment. Supersonic Dentist Drill To Eliminate Much Pain ST. LOUIS. Researchers are perfecting a supersonic dental drill that Is supposed to be painless, it was reported today.

The new gadget is airdent, a device that eliminates the pain of a conventional drill by shooting a stream of gas and abrasive at the tooth. Airdent first was brought to public attention in 1945 by its originator. Dr. Robert Black, Corpus Christf, Tex. Now hand-tooled models of the device are being tested at college dental schools, in eluding Washington University here.

Washington researchers said that so far results with the new drill had been encouraging. They sail some of the voluntary oatients fft! not agree airdent is entirely painless, but most say it is an amazing improvement over regular drills.1 The colleges are working to take any bugs out of the instrument before It is put on the market, and to develop possible improvements in tne present working methods. The main apparatus of airdent resembles a conventional drill, but It never comes in contact with the tooth. Another part of the apparatus is a thick rubber hose with a metal mouthpiece at the end. This acts like a vacuum cleaner to suck the abrasive from the patient's mouth Swine Influenza Spread Swine influenza spreads rapidly once it strikes a herd.

Within two or three days after the first pig gets sick, the entire herd may be down with the disease. Affected pigs cough, go off feed, and appear exhausted. They have fever, breathing is hard and jerky, and sometimes-there is a watery discharge from the eyes. Unless complications set in, the animals usually start to recover about five or six days after the first signs of illness. Deaths are few, but an attack always lowers vitality and causes loss of weight.

When an animal is stricken during pregnancy, loss of part of her Utter is almost certain. Box Office Opens Rain or Cleat. 2 -V Straws Nightly at Appro. 8:30 p. m.

''1 10:30 p. m. John Payne and HURRICANE" Thurs. thru Sat I HOP-BWeTTI I NITE THUfta, Fred ItocMurray and Maureen MAI "FATHER WAS A J. ETlB FULLBACK" Rl31 John Payne to tTf: "CAPTAirT CHINA" Tlttl Eltra Frt Nlte 3nd ft) Elimination or Our 4 I it Baby Parade Extra.

Sat Midnleht I II I ill I Sun. July 9-lfl I Hi Loretta Touns and plue "ONCE MORE I MY DARLING" I I Robert Montgomery 4 Extra Mm. Nlte I 111 Many Surprises Tuea. lili Ttws Aittmy Award I Broderick Crawford In "ALL THE KINO'S MEN" ptu "SONG OF GOOD NEIGHBOR LAWRENCE DRIVE IN THEATRE A Walter Read Theatre BRUNSWICK PIKE H. D.

2 TRENTON, NEW JERSEY THURSDAY NITE, JULY 6, 1950 is HOPEWELL, NEW JERSEY NITE This Pass, Cut Out and Presented at Box Office, Admits One Driver Upon Payment of 10o Federal Tax.

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About The Hopewell Herald Archive

Pages Available:
12,467
Years Available:
1881-1954