The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 25, 1921, Page 8

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K PAGE EIGHT FAVORS PLANOF FRUIT GROWERS. FOR WHEAT MEN Co-onerative Selling of Wheat, Approved by Spill- man CITES RESULTS ATTAINED Has Proved Success, He Says, in State of Washing- ton DETROIT’S FIRST MUN shows the Yirst muny street ca owned ear lines, which 2 service. Despite the pr What has become known as the Ca operative marketing plan was 1 d by W. J. Spillman, for- mer chief of the United States — bu- reau of markets and at present on! the editorial staff of the Farm Jour- nal, Philadelphia, in his address last night at the Auditorium under the auspices of the Farmers Institute. ifornia going right ahead. Six and a start five-minute service Feb. 1. of the city lines, who operated t YY CAR LINE—This picture | r to run on Detroit’s new city- | expected to bring better and cheaper | vate conjpany’s suit muny line, Detroit has built 18 miles jof trac himed to stop the} s already and is, half miles of double track will | Inset, J. 8. Goodwin, manager | he canon the first run. | Mr. Spillman reviewed the history,; ~~~ eee of the development of agriculture and) it ang we have just now learned the, # manutacturing from the former hand} principles underlying it. days to present machinery era and D ; Ya liforni: y 7 ‘1 fi ; own in California they have held this respongible for a surpls of} twen highly successful ¢;-opera- which was being used for the) tiye marketing association Here as an example of the way they form associations down thgre, Specula- tors’ had nearly ruined the raisin in- eee ; , dustry, Fresn> was suffe.ing be- . emedy is foun th are will be slump. The bunkers, merchants and u remedy Le ouml there will be) raisin growers got together, called ae Fen aor national concern,| 487m Sapiro, the genius back of the therefor he continued, Sei naee Wwe movement, and the raisin growers 4 iy organized t:eir marketing ass i The on'y remedy 1 can see is to per- fon ayo boa the. ely and 1 mit the farmer to make enough money ® rs. are./Prosp . i so that he can pay enoagh to attract labor. , workers from the farm to the city, ‘ \ Sees Food Shortage Farmers Organize “This man went out this fall and ing thrcugh the pre ent farmers or-| nizations as the Grange. “The United Grain Growers of Canada have called Mr. Sapifo to re-| organize their association, whiclt, has already been highly ‘successful. | “The American Farm Bureau Feder- ation is promcting thig type of organi-| zation and is doing a splendid work. ; aaa Wen BUREAU WILL SEEK MEMBERS. -KUPITZ CO. WEDNESDAY SPECIALS ~ ‘Meat Department Kupitz Co. -DOLLAR SAVER . Visit Kupitz company’s fish de-| partment, everything the market Wy : affords. ~ .20c Smoked Pork Shoulder...........++ eer re Crea] Veal Stew a Re Si ll ge SRE Pot Roast Veal.......... Boiling Beef ..............-.+5 ‘ Pot Roast Beef........:... Tl Bring your pails for lari, 22e pound. TURTLE LAKE VICTORIOUS IN , BASKET BALL | | | | | | y Washburn Goes Down to Defeat in Clean, Fast | Game | 4 Turtle Lake, Jan. 25.—-Turtle Lake} victorious over Washburn. \ in IN BIG DRIVE =: basketball game played here Sat-| ‘> OUT OF THE RACE. When a person wages up with a stiff back, -has pains in muscles, aches in his joints, oy has rheumatic twinges, he lacks ambition and energy and cannot do his best. If you feel out of the race, tired and languid, or have other symptoms of kidney trouble, you should act) promptly. Foley Kidney Pills help the kidneys do their work a ot system the poison- ane Berste matter that pauses so mucn | Sure you get BROMO.) 30e. trouble. They give re from sleep- e Sera i disturbing bladder disturbances. “The Texan” is coming. ACTOR SLINGS HASH “ ‘London—Philipe Ferraro acts in charity and society plays and then Dated this 25th day of January, A. D., 1921. THE CITY NATIONAL BANK OF BISMARCK, N. D.' Mortgagee. E the Savoy hotel. Says there isn’t enough money in acting as a profes- sion, CAMERON & WATTAM, Attorney for Mortgagee, Bismarck, N. D. ! 1-25-2-1-8-15-22-3-1 LIFTPAYIN | “ADVANCE RULE UPON FREIGHT Minneapolis, Minn., Jan, '25.—Ruil- roads cressing the Canadian border have cancelled orders requiring pre- payment. of freight, according to a statemont issued today by the Civic and Commerce association. To Cure'a Cold in One Day. Take GROVE'S Laxative BROMO QUINE tablets. The genuine bears the signature of E..W. Grove. (Be FREE TRIA Let ue prove to you, at our risk, that no matter how swollen, returns to His job as head waiter at’ “The way to do this is to reduce the spread between the price the farmer gets for the wheat he has produced and the price paid by the consumer, Approves Plan The way to bring this about is co-operative marketing. We have been experimenting fr 50 years with organized the wheat growers of Wash- ington. He g.t the farmers to sizn their crop for five years \to a selling. company, providing a penalty of 25 cents a bushel fon not doing so, rent- ed, or purciased ertough warehcuses to store the grain and the farmers are be.ng saved 20 cents a_ bushel on their crop. He did this all by work- “The order was originally made to protect the roads from loss due to discounting of Canadian money. | : CASE GOES TO JURY, | Crookston, Jan. 25.—The case of urday night by a score of 32 to 19. ' The Turtle Lake nfrera were: O. | Nelson, S. Johnson, f \ |Farm Federation Preparing for | Evin, E. Rem-| | 2 - ;men, J, Haas’ and W. Webster, sub- Membership Campaign : were: Schweitzer, Charlebois, Klein,| Mrs. Marshall Person, charged ‘with ; stitute. , , ? | The Washburn High school players in February ..- 2, | Westmiller, Reisser and Holtan. | Murder in connection with th = The game was a clean fast ene with} der of a new-born child, was Biienta »painfal or of how long your bunion brings magi been proved to ine may be, Fairyfaot relief; jis has ‘SN 72,800 bunion oe ferers in the past six months. trial will convince yeu also. AUDITORIUM Monday Night, Jan. 31, "sie" SEATS FRIDAY, HARRIS & CO. MAIL ORDERS Now THE BOHEMIANS, Inc., Present THE THEATRICAL EVENT of the SEASON 7 . sag L4 A Fantastic and Artistic Revel From New York’s Quartier Latin A GREENWICH VILLAGE F@LLIES Original Greenwich Village Theater Company and Production, Identically as played for 7 Months in New York; 5 Months in Chicago JAMES WATTS, TED LEWIS, “JAZZ KING”;-AL HERMAN, SYLVIA JASON, VERNA GORDON, HICKEY BROS., AND THE Twenty Famous Artist’s Models $3.30; PRICES: Entire Lower Floor, $3.30; Balcony, $2.20, $2.75, Gallery, $1.10; Box Seats, $3.85; Including War Tax. qt { 3 B mnivors was founded at the meeting = THE point of five great Indian trails, Today it\ has railway lines in seven different direc: tions, and it thriyes accordingly. It is the logi- cal distributing center for a rich. district | of = steadily increasing purchasing power. The First National Bank has served Bismarck wholesalers and jobbers for 40 years. Its facili- ties and its capital, surplus and undivided prof- its of over $300,000, make a connection here of peculiar value to the business man. 4% Interest on Savings First NATIONAL; | BANK BISMARCK, N.D The Oldest and Lar % in this section of ——— - Idawa Gold Mining Co. The membership campaign of the! few fouls called. : Burleigh County Farm Bureau | will! jopen on February’ 7. The: present| | series) of meetings are merely to in-| ‘form the people of the county a3 to) the purposes of’the bureau. i | The organization committee. of the | |bureau at-a meeting January 6 voted ; to affiliate with. the, state bureau and to place the membership fee at 310.; This will itclude dues for an individ-; ‘ual and the entire ‘family as, well. This amount is divided, half going to} ithe county and half to the state and inational organization, { { | To Get Papers | Each member will receive the coun- | ‘ty and-state papers~ | | A special. campaign committee to! jconduct this drive has ‘been appoint- | jed by the organization committee. The! |members of this. committee‘ are: 5.| ;M.-‘Thompson, Still, chairman; Mrs. | | T. Ellison, Sterling, and John Schnei- | | der, Bismarck. i |The members, of the : organization ; |; committee are: Harry ‘G. ‘Renfrow, | |Baldwin;’ Mrs. T. Ellison, Sterling; | Mrs. C.F, Lambert, Arena; C. F. Lindsey, Regan;, W. D. Perkins, Wil-; ‘ton; Albert Erstrom, “Baldwin;: Roy | Wildfang, McKenzie; Mrs. EE. A.) ''Trygg, Baldwin; and Mrs, E, Ay Whit- | \aker, Brittin: | } \ Nope of Farming Usher L. Burdick, well-known live stock man of Williston, ‘president of the state federation of, the farm bur- ‘eau,/has issued the following state- ment. % “Agriculture in America during the |deal. The calling has been regarded | jas menial and no. information of an} Jauthentic nature in regard to the jcost of production was presented to ithe public. The American Farm Bur- | ‘eau Federation, it seems to me, is the; great hope of a fast declining agri-y culture. Through this agency pro- duction cost will be presented to all, and the farm will show a production cost below-which farmers cannot sell. A Great: Calling “Seconily, agriculture will come to its own and be recognized as a great calling—the ‘greatest of all in America. t | “Thirdly, it will stay that ddnger-| of Simon Jahr, in Wilton, in McLean} | lous and. deplorable. condition now | prevaiting of the title of the soil pass- \ing from the tiller into the hands of |those who do riot till. | “Lastly, it will hold the boys\and | testament of Eva Boat, deceased. « (girls on the farm and build habpy | American homes.” STOCKHOLDERS jby Laurwell Skeels and Nellie Skeels, of Olaf Amundsen just arrived from ‘| Boise today, and has wonderful infor- ~| mation for -us. The object of this | visit by. Mr. Amundsen is to increase hi ings ti le his holdings in the company | page 135, will be foreclosed by -sale claims that the stockholders should | be congratulated on. the good judg- ‘ment used on being connectéd with ithis ecmpany. There is tons and tons }of ore ready for the milling process inow.: Very little of this stock is left ‘to offer to the public. If interested | communicate with me M. L, Frank, ; 207 Grand Pacific Hotel. Advt. Sell your cream and poultry ito our agent, or ship direct to \Northern Produce Co., Bis- imarck. Write us tor prices on cream and poultry.—-Northern ‘Produce Co. 4 See ORM, TETTERG Seber itching akin disenses. Toy @.75 cont box at our rick. ‘Minneapolis ‘and ‘St. ‘Louis railroad, Be, 50 years hasn’t had aj)square; LEGAL NOTICES | | Notice is hereby given hy the an-| TRIANGLE ENDS. IN TRAGEDY Railroad . Conductor’ Returns Home and Kills Man Found 5 With His Wife " amvert Lea, Minn., Jan. 25—John ‘Olson was shot put killed today by ‘Mr. Hinckley, a‘tonductor’ on the when he found. inthis -home. Hinckley instead of going on his run. returned and.found Olson, who is an ex-service man and was gassed while at the front, with his wife; ¢ He shot Olson, ‘the bullet enfering his heart. The! victim dropped’ dead in front of the house, next door. ‘Hinckley. is about 40 ycars of ag He has two children. Bota Mr. and Mrs, Hinckley have been placed in the county, jail. ‘ f .'A coroner's inquest will be held late today. | . NOTICE TO CREDITORS. im the Matter of the Estate of Eva Boat, Deceased. dersigned Linda E. Boat, the execu- trix of the last will and testament of Eva Boat, late of( the township of Ecklund, in the county of Burleigh, and state of North Dakota, deceased, to the. creditors of; and all persons having claims against, said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within stx months. after th? first publication of. this notice, to said | executrix at her residence at the home| county, North Dakota.. Dated January 5th, A. D. 1921. LINDA E. BOAT, ~ | The executrix of the Jast. will and| 1-25-2-8-15 OF REAR ESTATE MOR. A FORECLOSURE SALE, Notice is hereby given that that cer- | NOTICE RC | GOOD NEWS FOR | {tain mortgage executed-and delivered his wife, mortgagors, to the City. Na- itional Bank of Bismarck, North . Da- kota, a corporation, mortgagee, and dated the 7th day of November, 1914 \ filed: for record in the office of the register of deeds of Burleigh county, ‘state of North Dakota on the 24th of February, 1915. at 9.o’clock A. M. and ‘recorded in Book 127 of Mortgages at lof the premises in Such mortgage and | the jury today. Attorneys for the de- ‘hereinafter described at the front door of the court house in the city of | Bismarck, county of Burleigh, state | of. North Dakota, at the hour of 2 {o'clock P. M..on the 5th day, of March, | A. D. 1921, to satisfy the amount due (on such mortgage at the date of sale. | ~The premises described in such | mortgage and Avhich will be sold to satisfy the Same are described as fol- lows: The South half of Section twen- ty-seven (S'% of Sec. 27), and the | Southeast quarter of*Section Twenty jeight (SE'% of Sec, 28), all in Town- | ship one hundred forty-four (Twp. 1144) north‘ of Range seventy-seven (Range 77), west of the /Fifth Pri gipal Meredian, in’ Burleigh county, {North Dakota. containing four hundred twenty (420) acres, more or ‘less, ac- cording to the government survey thereof. <There will be due ‘on such mortgage on-date of sale the sum of three thou \sand. two hundred" sixty-four dollars and fifty-five cents ($3,264.55), togeth- er with the casts of this foreclosure. the! without discomfort, Geta box of Fairyfoot You are Not satiatied, return and get your money ' arn a a fense asked that the case'be dismissed on grounds of insanity. “The Texan” is coming. JOSEPH BRESLOW, NEXT TO HOTEL McKENZIE. 1 = ST Do You Want Propaganda | or the News? _ These are stirring times in North Dakota, the most janes ila pee: from a news standpoint than. any since state- os Both sides of the great issues are being related daily in the columns of The Bismarck Daily Tribune, North. Dakota’s pldest newspaper. Whatjis the function of a newspaper anyway? It is to print news and not views in its news columns. Criticisms belong in the editorial columns, not in— news articles or in headlines. The Tribune is trying to keep views and opinions out of its news columns. News should not be doctored any mare thah milk sold as 100 per cent pure should be wat- ered. Ae \ President-elect Harding, a successful ‘newspaper publisher, sets forth the following rules for the publica- tion of his paper: : y WHAT A NEWSPAPER SHOULD DO AND BE “Remember there ave two sides to every question. _ Get both. “Re truthful. _Get the facts. Mistakes’ are inevitable, but strive for accuracy. I would rather have one story exactly right than a hundred half wrong. Be decent, be fair, be: gener- ous. . as ; : “Boost—don't knodk. | There's good in everybody. | Bring out the good in everybody, and hever, needlessly; hurt the feel- ings of anybody. ; _ “In renorting a political gathering, give the facts, tell the «story as it is, not-as you would like to have it. Treat all parties alike. If there is any politics to be played we will play it in our editorial columns. ~ f DS “Dreat all religious matters reverently. If it can possibly be avoided never bring ignominy to an innocent man or child’ _in telling of the misdeeds or misfortune of a relative. \ “Don’t wait to be asked, but do it without asking, and, above. all, be clean and never let a dirty word or suggestive story get int& type. I want this paper so conducted that it can go thto t any home without destroying the innocence of any child.” \. These rules should govern every reputable newspa- ‘ per. : ' ° : risen: \ News not views or propaganda is what the Tribune guarantees its readers. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. ‘ By Carrier in Bismarck, per month.............- By Mail in Bismarck, per month....:.......-..- - By Mail outside City Limits and in state at large, a year ..... Ses Outside North Dakota, per year..... ..

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