The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 15, 1921, Page 2

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NO SLUMP IK BOOZE BUSINESS “ “Minneapolis, Minn., July 15.—De- pression among many lines of business niay Have caused a partial shutdown afmong its forces, but the “liquor bus- inléss” ‘evidently is paying huge divi- dends and promising an increase in ‘tHe forces of E. E. Hunt, supervising northwest federal prohibition officer, if reports sent by him to Washington can be accepted a8 a comparison. Perusal of the report for the first six. months of 1921 indicates that the northwest—Minnesota lowa, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska—is far from “dry” which the Eighteenth amendment stated it should be. Ai- though for more than a month, his force was below normal, due to in- sufficient. funds to run the department, marked activity is shown by his oper- atives, with a record that beats the first six months of 1920. from January 1, 1921, to July 1, in the five states of the northwest dis- trict, 1,685 persons were arrested on liquor violation charges; 56,131 gal- lons of liquor and pomace was seized; property and liquor seized were vary The weather man forget to yell “Fore!” and. the season’s biggest, hail- stones—-nearly as big and deadly ‘as golf balls—pelted players in the annual Father and Son Golf Tournament at Scarborough, N. Y. size of ’em. Just look at the uel at $58,744.24, and on which total taxes ‘and penalties amounted to $2,- 138,510.11. The ‘noted increase in the enforce- ment. department’s activities is seen; when comparisons are made with ths correspondnig six months last year when the total taxes and penalties for the period totalled less than’ three- quarter million ‘dollars against about 500 Hquor ‘law breakers. . Minnesota, ‘as , lias ; ‘Déeh ‘the case heretofore, leads the other four states in enforcement work. _ In the Gopher state, 787 persons were apprehended during that ‘period, ‘22,893 ‘gallops of liquor and mash. seized, the value of the liquor’and property seized being Gasoline Is. a Fal lacy It means merely that the gasoline bein: tested weighs more or less ‘as compared with water at sea level. : Gravity, or test, whether high or low, has no more to do with efficiency of 1 the height of a man has to do with his ability to reason. “High-test” is usually employed as. a defense for high price. i UY buy it for service. You want instant starting, Rei power, speed, ahd maximuin ‘mileage. You will get them all from Red Crown, of money ina year’stime. For the utmost in gasoline service Buy Red -the High-Grade Gasoline | | 25.7c a Gallon It is the best gasoline you‘can buy, You don’t buy gasoline because o ‘gravity or test. You regardless of price. ,and you will savea lot Crown gasoline than tremendous At the Following Standard Oil Service Stations: Ist Street and Main Street Main Street and Sth Street STANDARD OIL. COMPANY BISMARCK ‘(Undiana) Sec EEE N. DAKOTA '| was estimated ap $9,889.07. A year ugo, ‘home production of ‘catined good: ‘but fit; five: ‘TRIBUNE $26,412.96 dnd $911,884.58 of taxes and penalties assessed: During the cor- responding months the preceding year, the arrests were about half, and the taxes and penaltics about $100,000. . ig the next busiqege orcetgent officials. In that ‘s0n8 were arrested, 16,281/ gallons of liquor ang mash confiscated, | and taxes and penaltics amounting to! $541,029.87 assessed... The value of the liquor and property seized in Iowa in the corresponding period, the ar- rests numbered’ about 100 and the as- sessments about $150,000. With 305 liquor, law violations from January 1 to- July 1 this year, Ne- braska was the third: state in point of activity. The taxes and penalties) assessed amounted to $371,141.66 and the liquor and mash seized amounted to 12,625 gallons, the value of the. property ‘and liquor taken heing estimated at $10,513.70. A year ago there was practically little enforce- ment work in this state. Several tiou- sand dollars was to the total of taxes asseased against a few violators. Although North Dakota had fewer}, violators, the fines evidently were pro-|' portionately higher, for the 132 ap-/' rehended were assessed $219,499.82. ut 2,522 gatlons of liquor and masa was seized and the’property and liquor taken was valued at $7,157.85, Last year during its, firet six months there were some 20 Violators who paid fines amounting to about $20,000. ) South Dekota gives the enforcement office the. least. trouble. The 62 vio- lators_were agpesged fines of $95,054.18 and:they lost to the federal operatives 1,157 ‘gallons of liquor and mash. The property and liquor seized was said to be: worth. $3,636.80, In 1920 enforce- ment work. in South Dakota was spor- adic and few. violators were appre- hended. SH Superviaor Hunt declared. prohibi-} tion-enforcement.in South Dakota is). more efficient than in other northwest states because of, more co-operation of |: the state constabulary with federal | ~~ agents. FARRELL TELLS HOW CLUBS ARE. AIDING FARMERS| BY GEORGE EF. FARRELL, -| la Cearie of: Boys’ and Girls’ Club ork, U.:8. Department of * peiealiore. tiie sufficient food and élothihg to take care of more than | 100,000, “peopl Estimating that | 4 enure of the farmer | fs 1 rie uu get some, idea of: the ‘great task Before us when I tell you ‘that’ this country requires: about half a million new farm mana- ‘gersand dirpetors each, year. The ag- ricultural ‘colleges graduate between 2,000 aad 3,000 each year, but all of them are required ‘for teaching and in- vestigation Work. A small percentage K di t into the farming farming. is shifting. ty of complete prab- Dew:day—seed, soil, marketing and work y'aT . . The half ers come forth every year rap, tbe wot da; to beconje:'a most im- portant ‘part in the chain of American ‘iguiture, . ; ac ‘work ts one of the great agen- cies | r the Smith-Lever act. to place before the farmers dem- onstrations of the most desired prac- | puts-a half million young are all. tnillion ‘far! ad.women in: training for the of farming. tt to inquire what has been || mplished in the short time that it has Been in existence. Has it really affected the practices on homestead? A, few illustrations will ‘indicate the results secured. Last win- ter I was looking over the corn yields: | of the mid-west states and found that ‘Wiscdngin averaged 10. bughels per acre’more than the neighboring states. | | explained the increase by | } Prot. Moa stating that the corn clubs had been spreading the g°spel of pure-bred seed | | thore. thi was now | | than 10 years. . ‘uit, in. increased yields, For five years the 4-H club. mem- || ber. tias been teachitig the World the cold pack method of home canning. Canning today is more common in the rural homes.than bread, makin; has increased in’five ‘years from six hun- dred: and fifty million to one and one- pen el and, more, I dred ‘factories are t out labor- saving eduipment ‘ak the needs of busy workers. ‘And the send is n°t in; 8h consisting ‘of 10 members has had the | pleasure. of enumerating 48 farms |) \| Where pure-bred Guernseys have been | introduced within two ‘years. In Kern county, Cal, a group of 20 .boys’ ‘has undertaken to’ put pure-bred ‘pigs on the farms of that cotinty. A thousand-dollar boar heads the. club, herd. Two sales have been | | f condueted: and ‘the- pi are moving onto, ‘the farts. Iti ‘3 they, will be able ime fa When the price of clothing jumped to profiteering prices during the last | two years, 40,000 young -wemen came | forth in clubs ‘to grapple, with the problem. They ‘made.their own gar- ments. They, demonstrated every- | where. They spread’ wospel of economy through home seWing. They | contributed ‘their share ini the strug- gle to secure‘an adjustment of prices. These are ‘but few of the. examples selected from. the thousands that are found in practically very county where effective demonstration work is under} ‘million ‘boys and: girls are zed into clubs to,carry on these: pes ae tion of the: United States Department jof Agriculture and. the state colleges of agriculture. ROS C {act ie Rose Shop, 16th. Si ‘$65. willbe Sold for $25,00. MOTHER LOVE | ‘demands most, the workshops, the |’ e. rural jj The |} wo hun- | } bts Nee aa ‘ j | A Giiernsey Cattle Ciub in Indiana eactiing re: | der. the direc- | bce Rete. oT 5 SE SHOP - | tend the Suit and Hat Sale Saturday, July |: fits formerly. ‘priced. at 2 FOR. SONS— AND FOR DAUGHTERS BY RUTH AGNES ABELING. Playing upon a mother’s love for her son, detectives are unraveling the mys- tery of a Cleveland murder which has baffled them for nearly two years. ,..When every, other meahs failed, trading upon mother-love won. Mrs. Mary Brickel, the grandmother in the Kaber murder triangle, remain- ed silent for nearly two years, accord- ing to:her own story, which police say she told them, because of her son. Then suddenly she told the whole thing, because of that same son, whom she feared would be unjustly accused. ! As a regult, her daughter, Mrs. Daniei} Kaber, is indfcted, charged with the | crime. { Considered from an entirely unsen- | timental angle, Mrs. 'Brickel is right. | She has done, it would seem, the only; thing she could do, but— Do mothers care more for their} sons? | . Of course they do! Simply because | their sons are sons and they are| mothers. | , They would give just as generously to their daughters, would be quick ‘o do anything that might help, would/ make an equal division of property, but: there is a subtle something between mother and son which draws them jus: thought more. close, in spite of ihe fact that mothers and daughters are ‘often. companions. . Mayhap the answer to the riddle is found in the fact that right from the start. sons require more attention than daughters and that shade more tender | feeling {s simply the answer to an ap-! peal. For the feminine heart, if it Joves ‘at all, loves ‘most that one who} The little son, my mother will tell you, must. pe rocked to sleep. The little daughter can be put into her For Sale Farm machinery, header, hay plows, binder, mower, rakes, cultivators, tractors and numerous pieces not men- tioned. Will sell cheap if taken at once. DELTOX FARM 5 Miles East of Bismarck. ‘a year's job, |'N \ \\ 1$5.00, former values to $27.50. Any: trimmed summer ‘hat at ') ‘happiest women in the world are the splration of the most unselfish love aw woman gives. . THEIR HOS ~~ hia guests, ‘that he ieoss bed ana left alone. Daughters are more self-reliant. It is the little son whom mothers rescue most often from the depths of the mud puddle; it is the little son whom they follow off down the street and drag out of the midst of a moving knot of squirming bodies and pound- ing hands; it is the little son for whom they have to keep the dinner warm and then listen to his/sadly misfit tale and perhaps laugh a little over iv through pure joy of ‘having him there safely after the worry. And so it continues. As he grows older there are still the thousand and one things which mothers can do. Per- haps they are nothing more importani. than such discoveries as that he gets a better light in her mirror for shav-| [i ing one side of his face, and so he goes into her room and leaves the mirror of her dressing table a speckled mast. | Mother fusses a little perhaps, rubs it off, smiles gently and loves it; She loves it because he neded just the thonght she supplied in having her mirror at just the right angle. Th? Exp!ains ‘to a full supply of MINNEHAHA Pale and Special on hand, because It: Is the only brew he-knows df that can ttake the place of beor. BISMARCK BQTTLING WORKS, Inc. 5 Local Dist: Phone 427 ones who know that there are those who depend upon them. Know she is needed is the tn- ain Street Bismarck, N..'D. DEVELOPING A MARKET FOR OUR PRODUCTS Business expansion is by no means haphazard. It entails study and research. That our country may win in the race for world trade the Department of Commerce keeps its agents abroad to search business opportunities. The details of their ‘work are brought out in the seventh of a series of folders. on Our Government which we are dis- tributing each month. The complete series gives a highly interesting and instructive account of Our Government and its advantages to you. Send your name and address and we shall mail you the stories issued previously and each pamphlet pub- lished in the future—one every month. BISMARCK BANK Bismarck, N. Dak. Within Your Grasp FRR the time the seed is planted until the threshed grain is stored safely in your granary or the local elevator, your crop 4s within your grasp only once—and that is when it is harvested an waiting to be threshéd. : Winter killing (in some localities); a late Spring; a cold, wet Summer or a hot, dry one; soil blowing; weeds; rust; grasshoppers; chinch -bugs; hail; windstorms—year after year such hazards menace your crop. Do what you will, you can only partially protect. yourself against these dangers. : Then comes the final risk—threshing—the one facior, however, over which you have control. You need take no chances on having part of your hard-earned crop blown into the straw pile. Insist on Case threshing. Then you will be assured of clean. threshing, complete: separation, thorough cleaning, and unequalled saving of your grain: If there is no Case Thresherman in your community or if another is needed, become one yourself. LG \s - CASE THRESHING MACHINE a Wisconsin North Dakota Factory Branches: Fargo, Grand Forks, Bismarck, Williston, Minot, Devils Lake Minnesota Factory Branches: Fergus Falls, Minneapolis, Mankato Wil Wh

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