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s , , ’ 4 6 MONDAY, JULY 10, 1922 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE -PAGE THREE DAIRY SURVEY 18 MADE BY. Less than Three Quarters of| a Million Producing Dairy Cows Are Pure Bred \ MAKING SLOW PROGRESS Chicago, July 10—The milk ana| butter fat at present produced by the | 23,000,000 dairy cows of the United | { States could’ be produced by 12,- 000,000 if only pure bred sires were at the head of each herd according to a survey made public today by, the National Institute of Progressive | Farming. | | In Denmark, which has the mosr| ‘ highly developed dairy industry in} tne world, the productiveness of cows| * is double that of the United States, | it was. stated, | whe world’s champion milk and but-| é¢xplore that region. 7This boy found this hipbone of some prehistoric monster’ wading in.a creek ai Dennison, lil. Now scle ee ntific ,expeditjons may ter fat cows are in this country, bu. | ——— less than three-quarters of a millign | ternational radio communication, but of the 23,000,000 producing dairying | no definite, conclusions yet have been vcows ure pure bred, the institute| reached. said, This accounts for the fact tha:| Questioned 6n this subject God- our average production is only onc-|freyAsqacs, head gf the Marconi half that of Denmark and Holland, | Wireless system, said he did not An illustration of the profit in the | think.Esperanto would do. “But, at use of pure bred sires comes fron | the same time,” he added, “we are "43,000. Iowa State College, according to the survey. In this instance the first cross breeding of native cows with pure bred Holstein-Friesians showed an increase of 83 per cent in milk and 58 per cent in butter fat. The second generation cows, which were three-quarters pure hred, showed an increase of 180 per cent in milk and 128 per cent in butter fat over the production of the original native cows. If this process were followed in all herds, the survey estimates that production would ‘be about 4 pounds of butter per capita, instead of 17 a year as‘at present, 8 or ¢ pounds of cheese instead-of 3.8, and \3 pints of milk daily instead of one. The survey expressed the opinion that American farmers are progress: ing slowly but surely toward this standard, just as they are progress- ing in other Ways, that is ig the rota- tion and diversification of crops, greater use of fertilizer and the em- ployment of tractors and other farm power machinery which saves time to be devoted to the greater care required by higher grades of live stock, - The dairy farmer, the survey shows, is a leader in prdgressive farming and the prosperity of dairy territory is aparent to the passerby in th large number of automobiles to be seen, good condition of roads, and in thriving, brick-looking villages, and towns. The survey finds tht in communi- ties where dairying is in its infancy pure bred sires are often community- owned. ~ 2 The Northwest leads in the con- ‘structive dairying program. The greatest dairy show-in the world is to be held at Minneapolis next October. In North and South Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota, the survey reports that the State governments are actively behind the upbuildiny of dairy herds. In the Dakotas. there are big educational committees at work and the program has the sup- port of bankers and thé business men generally. ‘Another encouraging aspect of the situation is found by the survey in reports by the pure bred associations. All report good business and it is stated that five shipments of Ayre- shires were recently made respective- ly to Costa Rica, Hawaii, Mexico, China and Japan. A greater number of Jerseys have been registered in| the past year than any year in the| history of the American Jersey Cat-| s tle College, with one exception. Reg:| isttations this year so far number | Breeders are looking forward toa tremendous demand with a re- turn of prosperity to farms in the near future, it was stated. WIRELESS MAY ENABLE THE -DBAPTOHEAR Up to Expectation, This Will Be Accomplished London, July 10.—Wireless, with | all the manifold benefits already to! its credit may enable the deaf to| hear, thinks a writer in the current number of the Medical Press. If re-| + cent experiments with wireless tele- phony come up to expectation, he de~| clares, then there it little need for} the deaf to give up hope, for by means of “thermionic” valves the) very deaf have been enable to hear./ The author records the case of a man of 50 who had been deaf fort” many years, so deaf that he could only hear the shouted voice. Nevy theless he experimented with wire-| less telephony. It occurred to him} that by increasing the number of} thermionic valves in his receiver he} might thereby raise the sound to a| degree of intensity to be heard easily. | This he did, working up gradually until he had five thermionic valves | in his ‘apparatus, with the result that he can now hear his friends in} Paris more plainly than he can a person sitting in the room beside him. Also his hearing for the ordi-/| nary voice has become more acute. | The Marconi Company’s experts an” | using a valve similar to the ther- mionic on their “bonaphone,” an in- strument for imparting sounds to the brain by means of the bony parts of the cranium. It has enabled a| large number of persons to hear who hitherto were deaf. Thought has. been given in Eng- Jand to a universal language for in- | poor that $1 means food for several keeping in.view in connection with the scheme, now under consideration for, the establishment of wireless broadcasting stations, the possiblity of teaching languages by wireless telephony. I think this will be a highly. important part of the educa- tional action of ofr broadcasting programs. “One foresees the engage- ‘ment of eminent professors of lang- uages for the purpose of wireless tuition.” 600 DOG TAX DODGERS ARE GIVEN PARDON The Pardons, However, Were! Conditional on the Pay- ment of the Tax (By the Associated Press) Chieago, July 10.—Governor Edwin P. Morrow of Kentucky has par- doned more than 600 persons indict- ed on the charge of failure to pay a) dog tax. The pardons were condi- tidnal on the payment of the tax. Governor Morrow is a lover ofthe During his compaign of 1919 “Qld Ring” figured prominently in his speeches. At the last sesion of the General Assembly he was called upon jocosely for an address on “Old King.” - He responded, and be- fore he had finished he had swung a hostile Democratic House of ‘Rep- resentatives into line™to pass a bill repealing the state law under which dogs are taxed for the benefit of per- sons whose live stock may be killedb- canine marauders. | “The Senate, however, refused to vote: on the bill to repeal, and the act remained on the statute books. Since then county attorneys have be- come more active in its enforcement, | and have indicted hundreds ,of yer- | sons, charging failure to pay. They | reckoned without the ‘governor as a friend of “Old Ring” and his owner. “Three hundred and ten persons in | Russell county were the first to re- | ceive the pardon; then 370 were par- doned in Monroe county. The gov- Yernor said that owing to the public- ity given the efforts to repeal the law, many people believed it was no longer in effect; that others are so dog. days; and that /furthermore the law was needless, provided little revenue and meant little. He added, however, | that as long as it was a law the fees | must be paid, and he admonished the | indicted persons to pay and avoid penalties, which run up to $20. \DAKOTAN IS HUNTING’ WIFE (By the Associated PressY Duluth, Minn., July 10.—Mrs. Ralph |'T. Hinson of Sarles, North Dakota, Larrived here ,today to. institute a [search for het husband, who has not |been heard from since May 8. At |that time he wrote from St. Paul. | Mrs. Hinson, who is sleeping at the | municipal lodging house, believes her husband came to Duluth from St. | Paul. | business conditions and_ prosperity.” OPTIMISM 8 ON INGREASE P. C. Remington Sees Re- newed Confidence on Crop Outlook « “A bumper crop is in prospect,” said P. C. Remington, President. of Thé City National Bank today in gis- cussing the business outlook, “and it is the.one big thing which can be} definitely counted upon to stimulate many lines of business, particularly retail, i “A brisk retail business,” continu-j ed Mr. Remington, “will, of course mean that merchandise stocks, which are now very low, will, have to be replenished, with the inevitable re- sult. that factories will be speeded | up through the increase in demand} for manufactured goods. i “Even if prices for live stock and farm products are not materially rhigher, the cost of production has| been less in 1922 ahd it is antici- pated, that the farmer’s purchasing power will be largely restored, his | indebtedness reduced and his gen-| eral financial condition re-establish- ed on a sounder basis. “Employment conditions are far more favorable and all labor, want- ing work, is able to find it. Employ- ers for the first time in two years! ar, not able to quickly find needed | elp. : “All things considered there seems to be good reason for. the prevail- ing feeling of optimism and the last six months of 1922 should carry the country a long ways toward stable A BAD MAN?, _ CLEANED BANK! - __CHIMNEYS William Carter, alias William Burns, up for sentence for/ forgery at La Crose, Wis., was questioned in the district court about his past life. His record seemed clean up to the! time of the forgery, until, he quietly | remarked: 2 “The last job I did was at a bapk at Black River Falls, Wis.” The auditors in the court roomj leaned forwara with renewed inter- est@ The judge looked grave. “What kind of a job?” the judge asked sternly. Carter replied meekly, “I cleaned the bank chimney.” DR. WORST WOULD) ‘AID IMMIGRATION Dr. John H. Worst, commissioner of immigration, léft yesterday for! Fargo and St.Paul. At Fargo he will interview the president of the State Bankers’ association and at, St. Paul he will hold conferences with offi- cials of the railroad with a view to securing co-operation in the organi- zation of more intensive efforts for state immigration during the pres-| ent year. Dr. Worst is particularly interested in arranging for person- ally conducted tours for land seek~ ers. RAINBOWS Rainbow ostrich feathers are a’ novelty, They are secn at their best! draped over large, hats. Rainbow fowns are featured, too. Seven or Leight different colored chiffons are fashioned into a bouffant, skirt, joined to a silver or satin bodice. A Ghost Story — - a tenant, warned the 20 occupants soldier brother had warned her of the danger.--The occupants left. the building and done were injured, Just before this building collapsed in Buffalo, N.. Y., Louise Miller, to get out, saying the ghost of her J inthis ine, upheld , the yminimum | i P, WOMEN'S Attacked BG PROGRAM of Organization for | Coming Year Tn a'set of yesolutions drawn up| by the executive board/of the North Dakota Federation of Nonpartisan | ‘clubs which was in session. herejJuly 6.and-7, made public today, put them- | selves, on record for a higher stand- | ard of citizenship, approved Governor . Nestos’ action in aegepting the | provisions of the Sheppard-Townci | Maternity act, urged enactment of child labor laws, approved the .action of the American Federation,ofTabor | i‘ ee Ws see aw ectupchetetiatineed for| cacetaullian, arden, Berita oa a national saldier ‘bonus bills, con-| and reaction, is in a serious condt-| demned the action of the railway of-| tion from an attack made on him: ficials in attempting to cut the wages | (by thugs who are believed to have, of railway !emplayes, and, took agtion | fen associated with those who. on various other measures. — | lassassinated Dr.’Walter Rathenau,, Various resoliftions read as fo!-| ‘German, foreign. minister ~ lows: “Wherens, we believe that jus- | tice is better served in conference of peace than in confilet at arms there- fore, be it resolved, that we, as clubs 7 affiliate with the great national or-) stock in. another corporation, an ganization for world disarmamant. | electric light company, and who at “Whereas, .we realize, the absolute) their direction placed $500 in the bank to. the credit of the electric ing institution at the direction of th. | directors thereof, subscribed for |. 0 peton, North Dakota, Attorneys for the Defendant. ' MARKETING OF | For Wayne, home from the circus, POTATOES 1S | \his new efforts along this line pro- necessity of properly supervised play grounds in all of our sebools and par. | ticularly the rural schools, for the | welfare of our children, be it re- golved that we do all in our power to better the, conditions in our rural achools, obtain efficient and well trained. teachers, and insist upon the | provision of properly supervised play | grounds. “Whereas, the Sinclair Stabilizing pill, introduced into the last session of Congress by Hon. J. H. Sinclair of | the Third Congressional district, will | place agriculture, the basic. industry | in'this state, and these United States. | on a firm foundation by assuring to | agriculture a just profit above cost | of production, be it hereby resolved | that we favor this bill and ask the immediate. passage of said bill.” The members of the executive board also went on record as favor- | ing Senator Ladd’s monetary bill | which “seeks to restore to our gOv- ernment the issuance’ of all moncy constitution and which iow lics| which right is vested therein by our’ wrongfully in the jhands of the Fed- eral Reserve Board.” They urged | the support of Lynn J. Frazier | other Nonpartisan candidates. — KX PROBLEM Td Make His Efforts Profit- able Along This Line, the Farmer Must Learn —-— i Fargo, N. D., July 10.—The North Dakotan has to learn how to mar- ket potatoes if he is going to make fitable, potato men. who met at) Larimore recently agreed. The North Dakota Potato growers exchange was | organized for the marketing and ad-| vertising of the potatoes grown in the state. It was agreed that the North Da- kota farmer must put out good pota toes; put out dependable stuff which will be of standard quality; that these/potatoes shall be marketed in / | light in the bank, jit is held that such | Order and judgment affirmed. | herd, 12, no longer believes it profit- company, which was checked out by it, and where it further appears that the purchase of the stock'in the elec- tric company was for the purpose of enabling the bank to procure electric purchase was not a violation of Sec- tion 5187 C. L,, as amended by Chap- ter 54 of the Session’ Laws of 1915, prohibiting banking institutiéns from investing in the stock of other cor- porations. An appeal from a judgment of the district court of Dickey county, dnd an order denying the motion’ for judgment notwithstanding the ver- dict or in the alternative for a new trial. Geo. M. McKenna, Judge. Opinion of the court by Grace, J. F. J. Graham, Esq., Ellendale, North Dakota, Attorney for the Plaintiff. E, E. Cassels, Esq., Ellendale, North Dakota, and W. S. Lauder, Esq., Wah: TWO SPEAKERS Governor Nestos and Alfred tor Alfred, Steele .of Jamestown were the principal speakers before Rotary club at its: luncheon held to- day. Governor Nestos made a short talk, devoted chiefly to relating hu- morous incidents of the campaign. cent Rotary convention at Los An- Children Under 16 Not Admitted ‘Approved and Endorsed by Clergymen, Doctors and Educators Ton CAPITOL THEATRE ADDRESS CLUB Steele of Jamestown Talk to Rotarians Governor R.,A. Nestos and Sena- the Senator Steele reviewed the .re; By NEA Service. Toledo, Ohio, July 8.—Wayne Shep- able to mix rosy dreams of.a profes- ion as a cireus acrobat with too nuch apple pie. where the bespangled performers had leaped and twisted gon lofty bars, lunched on pie before retiring. Dreams! Of himself as a circus acrobat, naturally. And, sound asleep; Wayne got up, out of bed, removed the screen from his bedroom window and hurled kimself in a front somer- |} sault out of the second story. ‘A telephone wire broke his fall and dropped him feet foremost, ov. | the ground, unhurt and still asleep. He started back up the eave-spout and was half way up the side of the house when he was awakened by the shouts of his mother, who had heard tte commotion and hurried into hi. room to learn the cause. It took a moment for the sleepy Wayne to realize what it was all about. And then he hurried back]! to bed—by way of the stairs. “Never again,” he says. | DREAMS. MAKE HIM ACROBAT | | dumped their product on the market} branded sacks so that when a mer-| chant sees the sack he will know that there is, quality inside of it; that this must be advertised. i Potatoes ‘of splendid quality are grown in this state. The 1921 crop almost doubled that of the preceding |! year and a 35 percent increase on that expected this year, it was brought out. But farmers must Icarn, speakers said, to sort out the culls j; and feed them to live stock and sort out the marketable potatoes so that | when a man buys North Dakota po-} tatoes. of a certain grade he will know exactly what he is getting. Growers in the state, hergtofore, have not gone in particularly strong for potato raising and have imply Boys-Girls Make Money We pay 10 cents each for 5-lb. (% gallon) : BUTTER JARS Hustle around—there are ‘hundreds of these jars in Bismarck WAYNE SHEPHERD AND DIA- GRAM SHOWING’ HIS FALL. WARNING --there is DANGER VIDLY PICTURED IN THE DARING PHOTOPLAY Open Your Eyes - The Fascinating Story of Two Beautiful Girls. One Told of the Pitfalls that Await the Unwary, the Other Kent in Ignorance of the Many Dangers in ‘Kissing or Flirting Wild Joy Rides Going It Blind The Great White Way The Primrose Path PRICE: 30 cents FOR CHILDREN Black velvet is greatly liked for .children’s hats at the moment. geles, which was attended -by* 7,000 Rotarians. He ereviewed especially the address of a-New Jersey-man on citizenship. ‘The boy which the -Ro- tarians should worry about, he said, is the boy who'drives an automobile with a flask in his hip-pocket saying "To H—— with the Constitution.” He told of the question as to why the Rotarians were present at the convention: in Los Angeles and the various. anawers. The general thread of the. replies, he said, was that they were there in the interest of ,a bet- ter citizenship, in the world. Officers of the Masonic bodies were guests of the club. MOLE FUR Mole Bees to be one of the leading furs. for fall. Fur coats for the coming .winter show a tendency toward a close armhole which does away with the bulging, almost inev- itable with kimono sleeves, Usually a suggestion of a brilliant color is added in the piping. SUEDE Suede is the last word in millinery. The hat is of suede, trimmed with taffeta or satin. Sports hats require no trimming save a band or buckle, LINGERIE Paris designers say. that the price of lingeties: will not go down perceptibly this season as the cost of handwork and materials make this impossible. R..S.:ENGE, D. C. Pp. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Sulte 9, 11—Lucas Bik.—Phone 260 Auditorium Thursday | One Night July 13 unsorted and sometimes unwashed, speakers said. ‘ DECISION OF SUPREME COURT. From Ramsey County 7 State of North Dakota, ox rel. Joh) 0. Grubb, et al Petitioners and Respondents, y ‘s LO vs. Ed J. Marke, and Jacob Dewing, and C. J. Kopriva, Defendants and Ap- pellants. 1 Syllabus: - This case is controlled by the de- cision rendered in State of North # We Thank You” Dakota veJohn G. Grubb,-st al; ante. ‘An attempted appeal from the judgment of the District Court, of Ramsey County, C. W. Buttz, Jadge. Dismissed. 4 | Opinion Per Curiam. Mr. E. R. Sinkler, Minot, North; } TONIGHT MONDAY Dakota, Counsel for Defendants and | Appellants. ‘ \, Messrs. Palda & Aaker,‘ Minot, North Dakota, Counsej, for Petition- ers and Respondents.” gnandent. SYLLABUS: { (1) Where the cashier of a bank-; A Story of Adventure and Romance with TOM MOORE “MR. BARNES OF NEW YORK” TOPICS OF THE DAY And Comedy, “BATTLING TORCHY” TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY CONSTANCE TALMADGE in “Polly of the Follies” PRICES 55c,-85¢ AND $1.10 _ Including Tax ~ - Seats—Harris |& Woodmansee, Tuesday, July 11 HOBERTSON’S HAY FEVER CURE } You apply as directed. Very simple and easy to understand. | Directions come with each bottle. This includes a cure for asthma and bronchitis which is connected with the hay fever. Price $2.60. Bria WRITE W. B. ROBERTSON Mandan, ‘N. Dak. 1D. T. OWENS & CO. Room 1, Eltinge Block. Money to loan on improved. city property. Houses and lots for sale in all parts of city. We can sell you that house and lot and loan you the money to help you pay for it. WE WILL WRITE YOUR INSURANCE £OR YOU. List your property with us for sale. Farm Lands. Rentals. Before Buying See D. T. OWENS & CO, BUSINESS DIRECTORY | WEBB BROTHERS vane Dickey County. ARMERS STATE BANK, a corpor- cation, Plaintiff and Appellant, 7 ag Undertakers Embalmers Funeral Director: W: J..Richter, Defendant and Re-| Licensed-Embalmer in Charge DAY PHONE 246 NIGHT;PHONES 246-887 PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Day Phone 100 Licensed Embalmer in Charge Night Pone 100 or 687 BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY 220 MAIN STREET Upholstered Furniture Made to Order.