The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 13, 1922, Page 2

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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13,_1922 _Chichgo News: Humén life spans| rule of a Western college thnt ate-growing Jonget,, but the earncst | instructors‘ must be age meni. i " life-insurance agent does not harp on! Detroit News: In this age of slo- that theme. “ gans it is, surprising that no one’has Syracuse Herald: We presume ths} come forward with “He Kept Us fair co-eds are*also in favor of ti at] Out of_Coal.” ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE sg Lords of Creation. t ‘Turtarie Acid. - Seeks Throne hte “Men think they ‘are the: lords of| Turtaris acid is most effective in re- ion!” oe oH OEE sneered Mr. Meekton's moving satins made by permanganate “Mebbe they do,” answered Leoni-| Of Pothsh; it’ also’ retioves fruit daz, “But I’ll venvuve to state thar] stains, 3 people with those titles of nobility aren’t getting a whole lot of respect these days.”-——Washington Star. PAGE TWO. GRAIN REPORTS OR NORTHWEST HEED 100 BIG “Check off Durum” in Crop/ Reports Is Demand Being- Voiced by Many Experts’: GIVES FALSE IMPRESSION North Dakota Crop, While It} Reaches Huge Total, Is Below That of 1915 Hero Carpenter BRIBE WILL “BEDEDICATED 10 THE STATE Dedication to Take Place at 3 o’clock Monday Washington Sti: Jud Tunkins)’* says,-he wonders whether Solomon was really wise enough to-take all The new vehicular bridge across ee aa Lee He NEP the Misgouri. river between Bis- bid marck and Mandan—named_ the {North Dakota Liberty Memorial | bridge in honor of the state’s sol- diers in the World War—will be dedicated to the people of the state of North Dakota, it was announced today by a joint committee of Bis- marck and * Mandan citizens in charge of the bridge celebration. Governor R. A. Nestos will accept | WHEAT REPORTS ; What about wheat? ! The question of the trend of prices, uppermost in the minds of most North Dakotans, has resulted in efforts to gather far-reaching information concerning the future. One demand now being made. it that U. S. crop reports be changed | to differentiate between hard spring wheat and durum wheat. Spring wheat, as the world of trade understands the term, means a hard wheat suitable for grinding the bridge in the pame of the people of the state, since it was built with state aid and is a connecting link in traffic from east. to west in the state, Preceding the dedication at 3 p. m. Monday, September- 16, there will be an industrial parade of citizens of Mandan and Bismarck, with numer- ous floats, which will pass over a routine the two‘ cities of about 12 miles. The dedicatory exercises will a era Crown Prince George of Jugo slavia, who renouncd his gight t he throne in favor of his brotha Ktexanaer, now says he ‘will clain ‘his birthright. If he succeeds, ‘hy fwin @ethyone Princess Marie’ 0 ‘Rumania’ who became queen Q Jugoslavia through her recent may ing ail right at-the office; Jonge?” \ we . jood—Yes, I’m having a fine time.” _ ‘be held onthe bridge, the. meeting ae ‘ 4 wang point of citizens of the two cities. riage to Al 1 fi into bread flour.. But spring wheat, as the government uses the term, means that and something else. f When the Government reports that the yield of spring wheat_in ihe Northwest this year is ovet 200 million bushels, it includes that es- timate something like 80 million bushels: of durum wheat—whch is . not elie ior Heli omaking and = ~ most of which is ‘exported. ‘ % What the Government ought to ere eee Ree COLDER, ,. + Kansas. City Sthr: ‘Sometimes we Goosé-bone weather prophets be-} think our airtight \straw, hat would gin to be heard from. First predic-| be more suitable for winter wear, tion, and it’s for a cold winter, comes from the Yakima Indians] Asheville,Times: The Irish should negr Wapa i Wash: » Wint will know that the love of peace will not be ‘cold and’long, they. say,’ build hef-nest in. an ambush, files. and ofher,, insects have been unusually numerous. + ‘Full coverage or part—see ff ; eee, they 1 Sees aR oc Bi oe “i us for your needs. “Away From Home! vi MURPHY _ No mafter.where youigo—whether aii a vacation, on a far : cal aera : just a short automobile trip, the telephone keeps 3 .teach of. your place-of business. . oa derable amount of time akes supervision possible say, in the opinion of: many: know- P Weather _ bureat experts claim ing'the situation, is that the North- haa ee Sehe World Wei that the amateur prophets usually west has raised 120 million bushels] }rnment dam at Gilver Grove, Ky., |are wrong. But whenthe squirrel; of spring wheat. and 80 million order to raise funds to meet a | Jays away lots of nuts, and tree bushels of durum wheat. . . fayment on his home. bark and fox fur are thick, ignore Check Off Durum Flesh the experts and bet.on’a. hard w Spring wheat and durum ought] - LIVING ton: What.tuakes (6: ead not to be competitors in the mar-| Cost of living statistics should be i ie Fi i f ket, since they do not at all com-| taken with a grain of salt, cau-| snow enouge to stock heavily. pete in the mill, it is declared. | tions ‘National Industrial Confer-|*004?. What makes trees ‘prepare The. result’ of the Jumping -of| once Board. It is impossible to| Months ahead; by growing heavy spring nests and: turan Hest, gather figures that hold good in bark? Is nature merely a chemi- ives ‘such a large yield report as ical” machine? & be aepeeasiiig, apa the mar-|@2¥ ir communities, let alone na- ket. k 1 3 tionally. Escaping from Russia’ recently Spring wheat prospects in North] For instance, a recent survey! oost' refugee the sum of 900,000,- Dakota as of September 1 is esti-| showed that a family’s standard of} 999,990 rubles. mated by Be U.S. Bureau oH living that cost $1517 a year in riculture, Division, of Crop |: Chippewa Falls, Wis., could not be} ¢ ie”? mates, as, follows: 87 per cent “of | auplicated under, $1919 in. Bisbee, ‘Never Fails” flour will normal, against 5G per cent a year Ariz, : give you satisfaction. ago and a 10-year average of 66, ‘ ; Ss ana forecasts a production of 113,- Obviously, it is futile to attempt ‘ to set figures as a “living wage”| “"@ i9. y 4 044,000 bushels, compared with a nationally regardless of geography, Asks Blood Test oth Blwe Bell Sign, is practically-everywhere. It is easy to talk to your place of business from wherever you may be and learn the progress of affairs. % ban figeacontd Liew gh + NORTH DAKOTA INDEPENDENT TELEPHONE COMPARY a TFRHVHTAA AAA ALA What Are You Going To Do hat AAboutdte se For geveral weeks now we.have. been discussing with you the problems of how ito make farming more dependably profitable. ‘As bankers, we are directly interested in having our farmer customers prosper- ous. Sometimes we hear men say that it ig not to the bank’s interests to have its customers ‘prosperous; that when the customers are prosperous they do not: borrow, and’ if they do borrow the rates to them cannot be made high. There could be no greater mistaken notion'than such an idea/ In hard times’ hanks suffer more, perhaps, than any other: line: of business and when customers are: not prosperous the bank’s business is risky and losses constantly threaten. : Every bank wants to see its community prosper. _Evépy bank would like to see its farmer customers able to be depositors instead of bérrowers. A prosperous community: means a progressive community, and in progressive communities. things are done, improvements afe made, and projects of'all kinds are carried out. In a prospérous community there is the spirit of optimism, cheerfulness and good feeling. When deposits mount it means available money for improvement projects. Improve- ments lead ‘to other improvements and all unite to increase the community prosperity. The bank takés the savings of those who accumulate, pays. liberally for them, at the ‘ * same time guaranteeing their safe return, and then turns them over to those in the community who need them for improvements and development work. The more savings, the more deposits, and the more deposits, the’ more loans for community needs; the moje local development there is, the more agencies for other community prosperity; and as thére fs more community prosperity there are more savings and then more _ deposits. It is-an ‘endless chain which, as it goes round and round,, builds business and radiates prosperity to every nook'and corner of the community. £ h . Hetice, asa bank, we are interested in having prosperity start where it ought to’ start—on the farm. Here in our conrmunity, ‘unless prosperity starts on the farm, it will never staft anywhere else. “If we ate to build up thid community and make it rich gnd prosperous and progressive and happy, we must first take farming out of the uncertainty of chance’and “luck, afd put it on a‘basis where its success is dependable. ‘We have been making a study ef this matter and -have investigated the pros- perous, fafm ‘neighborhoods ‘of: Minnesota‘and’ Wisconsin. We have found that in those localities crop failures, thé scourge: of ‘this ‘séction of our State, are practically un- known. | We have found that instéad of having “one pay day a year, they have twelve. We have found ‘that instead ‘of: putting all their eggs into one basket, they-have a lot of baskets and they seldom, if ‘ever; :lo8e control of the baskets. We have found that ‘instead of engaging in a line of farming that leaves mest everything to luck and chayce ~ while the farm process is on, and then rushing the crop—if there is one—into a vast and complicated marketing system which they do rct and probably never will control, that they.follow a line of farming in which Iwck ‘and ‘chance are largely eliminated, a. line ‘of farming which responds to study. and planaing, brains and effort, a line of farming. which encouragey’other farming equally deperdab’e and profitable, and a line of; farming’ which ends itself easily to market contro] hy the producers, We have heen telling _you the past few wecks abou: this kind of farming,’ the \, kind. whi ag-proven itself to be.so dependable 2nd protitable witcrever it has beem = forecast of 103,158,000 bushels. on August 1, and 72,264,000, the final | estimate of 1921 and 65,354,000 for = PRICES the five year _ (1916-20)-average.| A penny here, a dollar there, There is no differentiation ‘in dif-| prices creep up again. Hard for ferent kinds of spring-wheat n this the ead of the family to determine reports Sean ._| what isa fair price. af Although ‘the yield'is large this ‘Traveling men still are talking| ear the U. S. Bureau reports that! it still falls considerably below the about,an honest merchant in Waco, big crop year of 1915. The har-| Tex. who, during the 1919 boom, vest report for 1917 was about 98: labeled an article \n his windo' 1 L : : per cent while for ~1922' it is 87| “Formerly 49 cents. Now.$2.60.” .. porting cast ‘includes— er cent. * é x a f naib ede Bolted f Pe U, 8: Bureau's View: RADIOS WALTER HIERS ‘ The U.S. Bureau of Agriculture “'anout 100,000 apartments in New): : has the following to say relative to) yo+~ City now are equipped with the Rotate ee papas knows radio receiving sets, according to a 4 trade estimate. j hat the’ prices are going ‘to ae The best Phat any of ‘iacean One radio maker has orders for do is to get together all the avail-| 25,000 wireless receivers: that can able information and base out in-|be operated only by dropping a dividual decisions: thereon. __|quarter ina slot, The day is close ‘It appears that Europe has in| at hand when all rooms in, first- ene Fearne crop abort sami ee class hotels will have these slot last. year. | Well-informed men machines says the Messenger, ho- think it possible that Western Eu-|‘e! trade paper. GA. R. -rope ‘tiay buy more wheat than last year, but ‘doubt that they will| buy enough more to make up‘all/ ‘Aged war veterans will attend of ‘this shortage. Long milling—/the fifty-sixth annual encampment that is—grinding into bread flour) of the G. A. ‘R., opening Sept. 24 of ‘a larger share, of thé whole|in Deg Moines. i wheat kernel—and substitution of] ‘phig historic organization’s coarse grains “and ‘potatoes’ may membership, at its peak in 1890, make up some of the difference. . “The latest statistics compiled in| 4S 409.489. Now it has aint this brueau are as follows: These| to fewer than 93,000. figures (given in round thousands| As they march into eternity, one of. bushels) include estimates, ‘and | of their strongest impressions must must be taken as only roughly in-|be that the Union they saved has dicative and of course subject to| not turned out exactly as they ex- later revisions: \ pected. The flag is about the only (in thousands of Peeee) thing that hasn’t changed beyond “| recognition. = be HUTUUESURI EES t it STETSON HATS Styled for Young Men a LONG AFTER faddish hats have been discard- ed, a Stetson looks fresh and trig, proclaiming it- self the thoroughbred it , is. The question of knowing where te find long serv- _ice with genuine style ‘and smartness is perma- nently answered when a man buys a Stetson. We have never seen a finer variety of blocks *4and shades than in the | # new Fall Stetsons just unpacked at our store “MEN'S CLOTHES SHOP - TMT TM invA UGE AEE Frolluction, Estimate. . cue 1,100,859 |, ict Reape U.S, Canada” "?" |’ Ask your grocer for “Never and Brit. Iidia 1,351,031 1,492,320| Fails” flour. Other countries 125,785 93,635. $8,000 ® “The foregbing figures d#pply, to the Northern Hemisphere. Re- ports estimate that — Argentine seeding, which is now about com- plete, will be-slightly higher than last_year. “Thus when we cast up all of the totals, about all that can be safely said is that the whole sit- uation is apparently closely bal- anced, and the Argentine and Aus- tralian crops next winter may be large factors either way. hat Europe can do in the matter of fi- nancing large purchases we do not yet know. Exports are not start- ing off as heavily as in some other years. 5 ( “Informed men appear ‘to think that the present price of wheat is low, but that the basis fora very marked rise in the near future has yet to be developed.” : YOU C, W. Burton, leading Wall Street editor, says: “I wouldn't give Henry Ford $10 a week as a finan- cial reporter, but I would agree to get him a job at any time at more than’ $1,000,000 a year as factory manager.” * For each man there ie some one & for him whict he is better fitted than anyone else. People are for- éver being told to “work hard.” More important is to find the work for which they are best fitted. Un- less they find it, they can never hope for spectacular success any Hiére than bquare pegs will fit into found holes. a i | | Alwith Von der Reichsburg they] _ ALEX ROSEN & BRO. Prop. McKenzie Hotel Block. |. ALICE TERRY and JACK MULHALL ; In Winchell Smith’s Great American Play - “Turn To The Right” Positively one of the most wonderful: pictures. ever ‘shown in Bismarck, A Dollar Attraction at Regular Admission Prices. ° intelligently triéd: out We would like to-see our farm community take up dairying and-we would like:to help the community take it up If we are to build up a prosper- ous community here we must do’ what other farm communities similar to ours: and = under :the.same conditions have done—take up dairying. e * With’ actual instances from farm communities that have succeeded, we have shown that-it is not difficult to get started. The big thing is to start. Do not buy expensive cows.: Get gocd common cows. Co-opefate with the neighbors to buy a good sire and grade up the common cows by that process. In the meantime, get.the ‘tarm onto a. dairy feed basis as fast a3 you.can and equip it to care for the herd. Grow into the dariy, business, do not jump in. Little by little, the hard- problems will be solved ard all the while there will be progress towatd the ultimate goal. As the farm ig changed to tle dairy basis, add hogs and poultry and ‘add them as fast as the farm ig ready for them, and get the farm ready as fast as possible. Follow the example of other successful dairy communities and solve thé marketing problem with a co-opera- ‘tive creamery. Within two or three years we will begin to get results and within four 6r five years we will bé well established on a profitable dairy basis. When that time comes crop failures will have few, if any,-terrors for us. The hot winds, the drouth, the bugs, the hail, and the frosts may come or they may not. Occasionally they might be able'to harm us but never again would they. be able to ruin: us We, and not the elements or the seasons, would be running the fatm We would do what the farméts ofthese other dairy sections are doing—turn thq farm into a factory and turn out a finished’ product instead of raw material As we pointed out inthe first article’ we publisked, the man who can furnish the market with a finished product jis the man who mikes the money and from one end of agriculture to the other. there 4s fo kind of farming which lends itself'so easily and so completely to product finish— , ing as daifying s : Let us have some ‘meetings for the discussion of this immensely important mat- greatermistaken hotion than such an idea. In hard times bangs suffer more, perhaps, der such ‘assistance. 3 3 wit Sat First National Bank » Bismarck, N. D. VVTEAHNEUEOENEEOEEEUNUUEAEUUENGUUAUOSEAUEAEEEAUEULOARUAUALUAEUE HCOOH Eri ITVHIUUNLEAUUSLAUALELAE -. Wanted — Clothing sales:| jcall him. He atrived trom Gers a recen! . $ Bismarck, N.D. j Brlea yet pald for a police dag. | oA AURAAAAEUEOATAV ARTEAGA EAE ALTERED SAS

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