The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 21, 1922, Page 4

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(a PAGE FOUR Matter. HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE i a a intered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments | reproduced in this ‘|| column may or may not express are presented here ir order that | = the opinion of The Tribune. They GEORGE D: MANN - - - - - Editor esented here ir order that i A ; of important. issues which” are || Foreign Hepresen ties NY being discussed in the press of G. LOGAN PAYNE D || the day. » CHICAGO - - : : - -DETROIT | “ING, THE F : } Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg.) TA SING. THE Te tet Tm | ae PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | Phe appalling conditions growing | ‘NEW YORK - ety be. - Fifth Ave. Bldg. out of the damming up of grain ~ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS republication of all news dispatches credited to it herein also reserved. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or | or not other- | as though the two governments had Swise credited in this paper and also the local news published | All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Daily by carrier, per year. . Daily: by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . se esees ‘Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . HDaily by mail, outside of North Dakota...........++++ +e. 7.20 ... 5.00 6.00 | } THE STATH’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER q (Established 1873) RELIEF IN NEAR EAST the last eight years. nyecord one of the greatest tragedies of all times. aptain of' an ocean-going vessel, who has braved hardshi; stretched hands of men begging for food too weak to wall bhe witnessed the great Jong lines of refuge: ‘the approaching Turkish hordes. . P =6r The American relief organizations have undertaken respond to their appeal. , i GRAIN GROWERS GET SEAT Avlittle item of news announcing that the United Stat Grain Growers Sales Compan, Hance in North Dakota. ,operations beyond the farm, into the world marts to d [pose of them. Led on wild goose chases by dreaming polit ;menon their own ground. : .of dividends by a member to customers, the bone of conte ganizations for years. federal law, both of which declare a rule of that sort unre sonable and void. It.was done by the organization 6f the new United Stat Grain ‘Growers’ Sales companuy in Minnesota. This co! of Delaware. ber of the Chamber of Commerce. by the Chamber. Grain dealers who belong to the Chamber of Commérce commissions ‘to their customers. is to establish and ‘maintain uniform commissions. The c say the boards rebating. The Minnesota legislature of 1921 and Congress recent! validity of the method will not, be attacked in court. h_ Aside from these matters of procedure, land sell wheat on the Chamber of Commerce. end of one year shall prove interesting, helpful in solving the farmer’s marketing problem. SAVAGE LE When it comes to instrumental music, Americans still a fin a state of savagery, says Prof. Peter W. Dykeman, University of Wisconsin. He thinks that jazz has a rhythm, virility and verve th are real contributions to music, and that the trouble wit azz usually is the players rather than jazz itself. : in its execution. = CIVILIZEO With Professor Dykeman calling in musical savages, makes. us wonder what real civilization is. sines and flivvers. BUSY? and talking. Wonder what he does in his spare time. ‘and organizations. who believe that if the true story is driven home.to ‘generous Americans there will be an immediate re- Ksponse which will do much toward preventing history to ‘A New York newspaper the other day told of a big, burly |i8 t market. land dangers for a score of years, who broke down crying as he related the story.of.the sacking of Smyrna by the | VMoslems. He saw women and children jump into the ocean to escape worse horrors than death; he saw the out- es fleeing before great task, but in supreme confidence that America will| had been granted a member- "ship-in the Minneapolis Chaniber of Commerce and a subse- quent item that the first sales of North Dakota wheat had hbeen made through the sales agency is news of real import- | The farmer takes his place among the seats of “Big Busi- ‘ness.” Through his representatives he carries his business . clang, trying all sorts of expedients, cursing and being cursed, a bona fide farmers’ organization is going to meet the grain The admission of the sales agency was made without any ichange in the Chamber’s rules, which prohibits the granting tion between the Chamber and the co-operative farmers’ or- Thus there is no contest over the Minnesota Public Market law of 1921 or the Capper-Tincher | cern is ‘not cooperative in the same sense as the parent or- ganization of the same name, incorporated under the laws The child but not the parent is now a mem- the Chicago Board of Trade and every similar large trading | organization, have opposed the admission of the co-operative associations and corporatiéns because of the rule of such boards prohibiting members from rebating any part of their | The purpose of the rule} operative organizations make. a practice of dividing their profits with their customers. That is rebating commissions, | af trade. The co-operatives declare it is not | prohibited such a board rule against the distribution of pro- fits. In the case of the sales agency it is so handled that the | It'must seem materialistic, this suggestion that savagery is something more profound that bricks, metal-working and automatic machines. As for jazz, it is a good principle ruined _ Civilization is not a matter of material progress. Nor | is savagery. Real civilization is spiritual, its degree deter- | mined by treatment of fellow-men. A kindly old Ojibway In- dian, charitable and tolerant to all life, is a more highly civilized type than the greedy, ruthless business “genius.” And some of the world’s worst barbarians ride in-limon- | traffic at the eastern end of the | Great Lakes constitute a direct tax | upon the producers of the American | and Canadian West, just as surely levied them. i Neither government. would dare: ‘impose: so monstrous a tax upon) the farmers. They-do dare to with- | j hold the remedy—the opening 01 |the St. Lawrence waterway—but | that is only because the farmers | ‘have not yet understood that the; ‘are being made the victims, at/ ‘heavy cost, of the desire of New! , York and Montreal to retain their | | toll-making monopoly of out-going traftic, ' Because of the congestion that ; Row exists, grain rates from Du-j jluth to Buffalo are six cents, | against two cents during the sum- | | mer. | | Because ef this congestion the | | water rate from Buffalo to Mon- | A stirring appeal to American citizens is issued in behalf | treal, @ route which some small | of the suffering, dying thousands of Asia Minor fleeing be-| ‘fore the threatening scimitar of the Turks, in a full page | teem cents a bushel against a nor- | fadvertisement appearing in The Tribune today, paid for by iThe ‘Literary Digest as a part of its contribution to the re- | Brie canal rate is now higher than | biief work. Stories of horrows among thousands of Christians | the rail rate. . ‘and Jews fleeing before the wrath of the Turks, driven into | vaste. lands without’ food or shelter, have, it seems, fallen lightly upen a world saturated with stories of slaughter in | two hours, are averaging two cents Yet there are many leading citizens a bushel. | | vessels are using for grain, is fif-, | mal rate of four to six cents. | Because of this congestion the | Because of it the heavy demur- | | rage charges at Buffalo, a thou- vsand dollars a day after seventy-! ! It costs twenty-one cents to get ; Wheat to’ Montreal; six cents to get | tt from there to Liverpool. | Charges are appalling. Grain is | dammed up when it should be flow- | It is dammed up {clear back into the country where jit is grown; for many country ele- ;Vators in Minnesota are notifying the farmers that they can take no more grain. This situation illustrates vividly wkat the two countries are forced to endure so long as the will. of |New York and Montreal prevails to ps kK; | Tence waterway.—Duluth Tribune. a j ie Seder SIR CHARLES HARINGTON The reputation of a soldier-dip. lomat was made at Mudania as day was breaking on Wednesday morning when the agreement that insured peace between Turkey and the Allies was signed by Ismet Pasha fpr the Kemalists and by General Harington and General Charpy for the British and French governments. The man whose sag- acity, alertness and patience had saved a critical situation was Lieu- tenant General Sir Charles Har- ington. A single error of judg- ment in conference or a precipitate order to his troops, and the sol- dier whom England expected..to d- his duty might have been the.cause. of a conflict with far-reaching de: plorable consequences. ' Chanak had been made impregnable, a great British fleet was ready in Turkish waters, reinforcements had poured into Constantinople. Preparedness for the work had a good deal to do with the consum- mation, but the clear-headed and resolute Harington rose to the oc- casion. He was the man for the emergency. A regimenal officer | when the World War began, he was a major general when it ended, At 50 he is famous, although three | months, ago people were asking, who is Harington?—New York Times, eS is- ti- n- ae | eS n- tt n The parent may grant i such: dividends, if it chooses, without any notice being taken Scientists Tear. Veil From Secerts Of Ancient Rités _ London, Oct. 21—Scientists search- ing in the ruins of Carthage, in Northern Africa, have torn the veils from the insoluble. mysteries which O- | 2,000 years ago attended the wor- hip of: the Goddess Astarte. Astatre | Was associated with Baal as the chief deity of the ancient Phoenicians, of which race the Carthaginians were _ | one of the most important branches. ly i The scientists have discovered sacri- | ficial vaults in the» inner sanctuary |of the Temple of Astarte, each of | which contains the charred bones of | thousands of infants ranging from e the fact stands | newborn babes to babes of one or ‘out that’a co-operative farmers’ association is going to buy |two years old. The piles of bones \are fifteen feet deep. They believe ‘The experience of the buyers for this assocaition at the | ‘MY, have found one of the temples | whre the seeret rites of human sacri- and perhaps verry | fice to Astarte were practised from \ the seventh century before the Chris | tian era until the days when the Ro- mans conqgueser and destroyed Car- |, | thage and forbade further sacrifices. We Astarte is always represented as a of | tall stern-faced woman, standing up- | right and clutching in the left arm; of an infant child. In the old rite Phoenicians offered’ newborn chil- dren to Astarte, and the bones of older children which the scientists have found are probably accounted for by the fact that ramilies afflicted by illness or mistfortune sought to appease her anger by sacrificing all their children, RAIL REMOVAL CAUSES WRECK (By the Associated Press) Wililamsport Ind., lief was expressed today that the removal of a rail caused the wreck of Wabash eastbound _ passenger train No. 2 near here last night, causing the death of three persons; the injury of seven others and the destruction of seven coaches by fire. ‘The ‘death list follows: Engineer Charles) L. at | th it | Schmuggee, If you think you are overworked, consider the activities | Decatur, Il; H. W. Martin, express | of Joseph Simon, a Syrian,~40 years old. In Chicago court ‘messenger, Detroit, and R.A. Smith, he tells the judge that, in addition to being head of the Purist White religion, he is writing a new Bible of 2000 pages, | inventing a new clock and’a revised calendar, also working ; out a 13-letter alphabet and a simplified system of spelling | baggageman, Detroit. Several injured were taken to a LaFayette Hospital. Most of the mail was saved end Deputy Sheriff Stewart placed a guard around the express and mail and later it was removed to the | Milliemsport Postoffice, detay the opening of the St, Law- | Oct. 21.—Be-| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE DAUGHERTY BREW | ik AN \ \ if ; W2AWAAZ ! : breath, she tore herself from the sheets and blankets, reeled, across the room to where Stormon’t rifle stood, threw in a cartridge, dragged herself to the window. Dimly. in the ‘night mist, flung the rifle across the window still and fired. Then she fired. again—or thought she did. There were two shots. “Eve!” came Stormont’s sharp cry, “what the devil are you trying to do to me?” ROBERT W. CHAMBERS \@10R2_GEORGE H DORAN COMDANY BEGIN HERE TODAY Alone in her step-father’s camp in the Adirondacks, with 'STATE TROOPER STORMONT on guard outside, is beautiful |EVE STRAYER, the nymph of the forests and the sole influence for good’ in the crime-stained career of her. step-father, MIKE CLINCH. Under Eve’s pillow was the gem of priceless worth, the Flaming Jewel/ first stolen His ery terrified her; the rifle clattered to the floor. The next instant he came running up the stairs, bare headed, heavy pistol swinging, and halted, horrifiea at sight of her. “Eve! My God,” . he whispered, taking her blood-wet body into his arms. “Go after Leverett,” she gasped. “He’s ‘robbed daddy. He’s running away—out there;-somewhere—” I know it is—don’t lie, You want that I should stick you” good? That what you want— you dirty little dump-sluet, Well, then, gol ram yeh tri fix yeh like Quintana was aimin’ at—” : He slit the sheet downward from her imprisoned -knees,, seized one wounded foot and tried to slash the bandages. “T’ll eat a coupla toes: off’n yeh,” Lhe snarled, “—I’ll: hamstring . yen trom the tae Meet i “Where' did he hurt’ you, Eve—my i ay ; x keeps!”—struggling to mutilate | little Eve—” a COUNTESS OF ESTHONIA by the] her while she flung her helpless and] “Oh, go! go!” she wailed—*I'm international thief, QUINTANA, and stolen in turn from | Quititana ‘by Mike Clinch. And now, outside in the forest, men tracked one another with rifles, Quintana had returned to re- gain the jewel. Clinch hadesworn to wipe out his gang. And there | also was ; | JAMES DARRAGH, under’ the name 1 ol HAL SMITH, who had sworn to re- store the gem to the now beg- | gared countess, | Creeping like was the murderer, EARL LEVERETT, entangled body from side-to side and bit at the hand that was almost sut- focating, her. Unable to hold her any longer, he seized a pillow, to bury the venomous little head that writhed, biting, under his clutch. As he lifted it he saw a packet! lying under it. “God!” he panted. As he seized it she screamed for the first time: “Jack! Jack Stor- mont!”—and fairly hurled her help- less little body at Leverett, striking him full in the face with her head. not hurt. He only pricked me with his knife. I'm not hurt, I tell you. Go after him! Take your pistol and follow him and kill him!” “Oh,” she cried _ hysterically, twisting and sobbing in his arms, “don’t lose time here with ‘me! Don’t stand here while he’s running away with dad’s money!” And, “Oh—oh- oh!” she, sobbed, collapsing in his arms and clinging to him convul- sively as he carried her to her tum- bled bed and laid her there. “Dad’s money. was, under my pil- low,” she wailed. “Leverett tried to a snake outside who had_be- When I screamed for you’ he tried to choke me with the pillow. Didn't you hear me scream?” “Yes. I came on the jump.” his violence dashed all breath out of her. Sick with the agony of it, speech- less, she still made the effort; and, Trooper Stormont. CHAPTER. V She saw him: walk away—saw his shadowy, well-built form fade into the starlit mist. as he stumbled to his feet and turn- “It was too late,” she sobbed; An almost uncontrollable impulse |ed ‘to escape, she struggled upright,|“—too late! .He saw the money set her throat and: lips’ quivering | choking, blood running from the| packet under my pillow and he | with desire to call to him through | knife pricks in her neck. snatched it and ran. Somehow 1 With the remnant of her strength. I fired and still writhing and gasping for! found your rifle and fired. the night, “I do love you! I do love twice.” ’ you! Come back quickly, quickly!—” The girl turned from the window, looked at the door for a Soaent | then her face flushed and she walkil toward a chair and seated herself, leaving the door unbolted. For a little while she sat upright, alert, as though a little frightened. After a few moments she folded her hands and sat unstirring, with low- ered head, awaiting Destiny. It came, noiselessly. And so swift-, ly that the rush: of air from her! violent opened door was what first startled her. For in same second Earl Lev- erett was upon her im his stockinged feet, one bony hand gripping her mouth, the other flung around. her, pinning both arms to her sides. “The packet!” he panted, “—quick, yeh dirty little cat, 'r'T’ll' break yeh head off’n yeh damn neck!” She bit at the hand that he held crushed against ‘her mouth.. He lifted her bodily, flung her. onto the bed, and, twisting sheet and quil around her, swathed her to the throat. | Still controlling her violently dis- | tored lips with his left hand and | holding her sa, one knee upon her. | he reached back, unsheathed his j hunting knife, and pricked her throat till tbe blood spurted. “Now, go ram yeh!” he whispered fiercely, “‘where’s Mike’s_. packet? | Yell, and ‘\’ll hog-stick yeh fur fair! | Where is, it, you dum thing!” | He took his left hand from her mouth, ‘rhe distorted, scarlet lins writhed| back, -displaying her white | teeth cLenched. “Where’s Mike’s bundle!” he re- | peated, hoarse with rage and fear, “You rat!” she gasped. At thlat he closed her mouth again, and again he pricked her with his \ knife, cruelly. The blood welled up onto’ the sheets. “Now, by /God!” he said j ghastly voice, “answer or Til! her: stick yeh next time! Where is it? j Where! where!” 1 She only’ showed her teeth in an- | swer. Her eyes flamed. “Wiiere! Quick! Gol ding yeh. Tl s'tove this knife in behind your {ear ‘i: you don’t tell! Go on. Where jis it” It’s. in this Dump somrers, EVERETT TRUE Wwe Just Sov TiMS To CALL UP MY MAN 'BaFORE — ING CEAVGS HIS OFFICS. BY CONDO a 7 i a Pe Lehebht TATA en q VRURNTARADADEAUALADILAIONG THAT. _Foue ; Whar Xe Weems she saw a running figure | trayed first Clinch and then Quin-| Half stunned, still clutching the] make me tell where it was. 1 tng, to. gain, the devel. for him-| packet, he tried to stab her in the | wouldn’t and he hurt me—” | thought af tke nen cam Fy? | stomach; but the armor of bed-| “How?” swe! her heart, her sudden love for clothes turned the knife, although “He pricked me with his knife. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1922 ae Her only bullet had torn his cam- \paign hat from his head. But he {did not tell her. | “Let me see your neck,” he said, | bending closer. { She bared her throat, making a | soft, vague complaint like a hurt |bird—lay there whimpering under ‘her breath while he bathed the blood {away with lint, sterilized the two leuts from his emergeney packet, and i bound them. | He was still bending low over her j When her blue eyes unclosed on his. | “That is the second time I've tried “i Td to. kill you,” she whispered, | thought it was Leverett...” | have died if I had killed you.’ | There was a silence. | “Lie very still” he said huskily. “Pn be back in a moment to re- | bandage your feet and make you | comfortable for the night.” “I can’t sleep,” she repeated | desolately. “Dad trusted his money |to me and I’ve let Leverett rob me. | How can I sleep?” “Ll bring you something to make you sleep.” | “¥ ean’t!” “I promise you you will sleep. Lie still. He rose, went away downstairs and out to the barn, where his cam- paign hat ,lay in the weeds, drilled through by a bullet. - There was something else lying there in ‘the weeds—a flat, muddy, |shocless shape sprawlin grotesque: |ly in the foggy starlight. One hand clutched a |knife; the other a packet. Stormont drew the packet from ithe stiff fingers, then turned the | body over, and, flashing his electric jtorch, examined the ratty visaze— jwhat remained of it—for his pistol hunting | to cheek-bone, almost obliterating | the trap-robber’s features. | Stormont came slowly into Eve's |son for you to lie awake any longer, 'Tll fix you up for the night.” | Deftly he unbandaged, bathe. | dressed, and rebandaged her slim | white feet—little wounded feet so lovely, so exquisite that his hand trembled-as he touched them. “How did you get back dad’s i money?” she asked in an odd, emo- tionless way as though too weary for further surprises. “Tl tell you in the morning.” ! «pid you kill him? your pistol.” “Tl tell you all about it in the morning. Good night, Eve.” Y didn’t hear | As he bent over her, she looked \up into his eyes and put both arms {around his neck. It was her first kiss given to any man, except Mike Clinch. After Stormont had gone out./and closed the door, she lay very still for a long while. Then, instinctively, she touched her lips with her fingers; and, at the contact, a blush clothed her brow to ankle. The Flaming Jewel in its morocco casket under her pillow burned with no purer fire than the enchanted flame glowing the virgin heart of Eve Strayer of Clinch’s Dump.’ (Continued in Our Next Issue) DEHYDRATION OF FRUIT IS: BIG BUSINESS Dehydration of fruit and vegeta- bles, one of the nation’s newest in- dustries, is also one of its fastest growing industries. Secretary of Commerce Herbert | Hoover has declared that in a year | of high prices only 40 percent of the nation’s white potato crop of 390,000 bushels ever reached the market. All of this destruction and capital’ loss could have been avoided i by scientific dehydration—in plain English “drying.” All vegetables in common use contain from 65 to 95 percent of water. Dehydrated, they contain from 5 to 10 percent. Remembering the combined dead weights of tin containers, crates and boxes, com- pared with the bulk of fresh or tin- ned fruits and vegetables in transit, | it is easy to realize the advantage lin freight charges possessed by de- | hydrated products. | In 1906 there were thirty dehy- drating plants operating in Ger- many. In the total quantity of po- tatoes alone dehydrated in the em- pire amounted to more than three Itimes the total potato crop of ‘the | United States. | “The real advancement in dehy- | drating has been developed in the | west. The King Food Products Com- ‘pany has spent- years of time and thousands of dollars in experiment- ing along dehydrating lines. Today, |by a new process they are evaporat- ing the moisture from practically \every kind of vegetable and fruit. | retaining all the natural flavor and food value. This concern is daily | adding to their factory output and | housekeepers can purchase a paper carton of their favorite fruit or ve- getable, soak the contents in water and serve a generous supply to ev- ery member of the family at very small cost. |CLAIM SUSPECT | HAS CONFESSED (By the Associated Press) Minot, N. D., Oct. 21—Earl Kyle of Kenmare and H. M. Patterson, an Oklahoma product, have confessed to t authorities that they were. members jof a gang which robbed a store ct | Westhope, N. D., a: few. weeks ago the night marshal, Sheriff A. P. Sco- field announced today. The two men are held at Bottineau and Kyle is junder $3,000 bonds which thus far waiving preliminary hearing on a charge of burglary. A murder |charge may follow, Bottineau au- thorities state. | bullet had crashed through from ear; |room and laid the packet on the | sheet beside her. | “Now,” he said, “there is no rea- ' \and shot and killed Carl Peterson, | he has been unable to furnish, after | PRESIDENT COULTER LAYS DOWN THREE MOST IMPORTANT STEPS NEEDED TO BETTER FARMING e Head of State Agricultural College ; Hotly Resents Charge That Farmer Is Solely to Blame for Present Conditions — Says All Must Cooperate in State. NECESSARY Harvey, N. D., Oct. 21.—Criticiz- ing the critics who maintain that the farmer is to blame for the pre- sent situation. in which he finds himself in North Dakota, Dr. John Lee Coulter, in a paper read here by Rex Willard, because of the illness of Dr. Coulter, de- clared that while specialized grain farming that was not the entire solution of the problem. He maintained that farmers, busi- nessmen, professional men and in fact the whole state must raise and fall together and urge co-operative organizations with all groups re- presented. He said the prices of the things the farmer has to buy must-come down or the prices ot the things he has to sell must come up. The farmers cannot delegate their marketing business to any other group but must actively participate in it themselves he declared. “There has been enough real care- ful study now made to. show very clearly that the farmers of our state are passing through two years of very grave injustice from the standpoint of, economic returns for labors performed.” said Dr. Coulter in his paper. “The best. informa- tion we have at this time shows very clearly that the average dollar received by’ the farmer for this last year’s crop is in fact worth to him only ‘about 62 cents. ‘Those seriously interested in farming themselves or in aiding agriculture should recognize this fundamental fact and.proceed deliberately to try to help solve the problem con- fronting us. Farmer Not To Blame “First, there are some incompet- ent observers who jump in where they are not needed and glibly pro- claim that the farmer has brought it upon himself. Their whole story can be reduced to two sentences: One is, that in periods of good yields and good prices the farmers wasted their time and money in CHANGES foolish spending, and another, that, when yields and prices were good farmers, should have abandoned grain farming and taken up other types of farming. “While it is always wise for farm- ers andfor all other people to save a little \more when crops are good and. prices’ are high, and while it is’ also’ sound advice to gradually begin changes necessary from an uncertéin system when conditions are the best. I think that nost of the languages used is unfortunate. I cannot find any large amount of extreme or excessive wasteful buy- ing by farmers and on the other hand I find that great numbers of farmers did begin at that time to make the adjustment so. much de- sired. ‘ Three Proposals “Passing from that view of the subject I think that we should all frankly acknowledge; first—that the specialized’ grain farming must gradually give way to diversified farming, but I do not fee! that this is the full solution of the problem. “Secondly—I think without ques- tion railroad rates, wages and the prices which farmers pay for every- thing they buy must be adjusted downward or else radical steps must be taken to adjust farm prices up- ward. “Thirdly—I think that farmers must necessarily organize their marketing so as to adjust farm prices upward. “In other words, there are three basie changes necessary: The first, to reorganize or change from specialized grain farming to diversi- fied farming. The second, to work for downward revision of railroad rates, wages and prices in general. The third, upward , revision of prices of farm products, Advises Against Extremes “T cannot go into detail but wish to add one of three further obser- vations so that I may. not be mis- understood. First, with reference to changing from specialized grain farming to diversified farmng. I do riot mean to give up grain farm- ing but rather to reduce it in acre- age and substitute on part of acre- age, cultivated hay, forage and pasture crops and introduce some livestock of different kinds. “I do not believe that the average farming should go extremely into da‘rying or extremely into poultry er beef cattle, sheep or hogs, Dever- sified arming is the opposite from spedializod farming. A second matter concer’ng which I wish to be understood has to do with the marketing. If we must learn to read and write each of us must do it ourselves, ‘The ‘teacher cannot do it for us. If each of us would be a Christian we must ourselves partic’pate in church life. SE ‘DAILY PHOTO: H | > BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA w “Knox all over the Northwest for Quality .@ MAIL US YOUR FILMS © |The Bandy-Prophylectic Kit for Men PR Ailords Uimest Protec ‘Tube asc. Kit ve ta San-Y-Kit Co, B lew Yorke “ Dee | ee Eee A, —_o—w hk. EN of ‘ t t } t ‘ 1 ; ‘ f eps ee aa oa i ¢ : ] f ! i : Y i) 1 ‘ P I 3 ¢ ee a a a pone a

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