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‘PAGE TWO MARKETING IS TAKEN UP BY “AG.” AGENTS Many Local ‘Formed Through Their _ Activities This Year Marketing and farm finance activ. ities have played a large part in the .wrogram of the county penne | extension | ‘gents of North Dakota during the | vast year acvording to Gordon W. Randlett, director of the state: ex- | ion division, “Wor an agricultural college or aj ounty agent to mix in co-operative narketing of farm products or farm | dnancing a decade ago would? have’) 4 been considered heresy,” declared Mr. | ~*Randlett today. “Developments ef the past ‘tr years, however, bring out most e: vhatically that problems of produc- tion only do not make up a well- anced program of extension work, | Each of the 86. county extension | agents in North Dakota is making a| study~of the particular local prob-| lem and with the cdaperatién of our| state agents and of” the farmers in; the county is putting into. operation | xs rapidly a8 possible a program cal- | lated to bring about efficient pro- | duction, economic ¥arketi dd ade- | quate financing. Fy oyevation of | euch a program will resu!!-in a maf: | imum price to’ the farmer for - products and a minimum price to the| ‘-consumer—a happy condition for the; public in general. . “Last spring the Extension Di- vision’and the North Dakata Agricul- tural college, together with the coun- ty extension agents, openly advocated | 2 reduction in the acreage of wheat due! to the excessive carry-over from the 1921 gop and’ the indications from every quarter of a large crop: this ‘ear, with''a consequent flooding of the market and a small) price per! bushel for the crop this fall. | Pres- | et prices justify the attitude taken by the extension agents last spring. | Slow on Potat | “Go slow on potatoes,’ ‘was the advice from the extension ‘staff to the farmers of the state’ last spring | Small acreages and thorough grading | of the product before marketing were advised. Many farmers, influenced | by the success of their neighbors! with potatoes the previous year, ulunged heavily, with the result that at the«preset time potatoes whicn| are not stgictly graded are nearly | worthless.‘ “Our work has not;been confined calling attention to market and cvop conditions. ‘At all times we have turnished farmers with information vgarding existing marketing \agen- cjes. County agants have held meet- iggs at which they have presented the variays co-operative plans for marketing.wheat, éxeh as the U. S. Grain Growers, Inc., the North Da-. kota Wheat Growers,and the Equity. Varmers have ‘not been advised to oin any particular agency, but they have received: valuable information xegarding the fundamental principles of successful co-operative marketing. “One of the most 'successful co- operative marketing projects which was formerly used‘through the ‘ac- tivities of the county extengen gents js the North Dakota wool pool, which, has just closed out the 1922 clip at prices netting the growers an sevrage of 35 cents per pound, or fram‘ five to ten cents more than was | realized on the average by growers who sold through other-sayrces. Local Associations. “Scores of local .potato- marketing associations have been organized by county extension. agents and plans are well underway Yor a state-wide > potato marketing organization in co- operation with the Farm Bureau, Nearly fifty live stock shipping «s- sociation have been formed, and more A PITY 10 LOSE ANOTHER HAIR 35c “Danderine” Savestout Hair—Ends Dandruff! | Delightful Tonic + | i | | | only fools let hair fall out and) dandruff stay. Neglect means a hald | spot shortly. A! little “Danderine’ now will save your hair. This: de- lightful tonic cleans the. scalp. of. ev. ery particle of ‘dandruff, tightens the hair-root pores, so the hair stops };cupations: | coming out and so the vitalizing oils. | Plowing . * which are the very life and strength Discing of the hair, can not ooze away. | Danderine is not sticky or greasy. | It has made weak, sick, neglected hair strong and ‘healthy for ntillions of men and women. Your comb ‘or brush is ‘warning you. Hurry to any drugstore and get a-bottle now. Don't wait! Ady, a ‘Askpciations | ; these six counties’ and ‘interviewed | Hauling | Harvesting with ‘header | tions at_ the bottom of the list. The | shocked grain, twenty-nin i | than a dozen co-opérative cream ship- | ping associations. County .agents/ Lee also active in organizing a mum- | ber of the seed marketing associa- | tions for suc products aq alfalfa, | | siveet clover, brome grass, ete. With- | in the last, few months a full time | marketing specialist has, entered the ' employ of the extension division, and | it is planned to esaborate consider- | | sbly on this type ¢ work in the fu-} | ture, “In the western part of the state] county agents have helped farmer. | secure seed loans from the federal | government, and in those counties | | employing’ agents more than twice as : many loans were secured than in the! counties that do: not. Agents have | so been active in organizing loan| ociations so, that farmpers could} securé long time logas at keasonable | rates: from the federal farm land, bank.” CHILDRENIN “SCHOOLS DO ‘MUCH WORK | oH i) cia i Representatives of Children’s} Bureau Report on Their Investigations A large percentage of the boys and girls attend the North Dako) public schools do enough farm “and house work to be ‘included in the list of children performing labor, according to the’ report of the inves- tigation of industrial conditions among children, conducted by re- presentatives of the Children’s Bu- reau during the: last school year. This standard must be that the child} has done six hours of work a day on the farm’ for twelve days during vacation time, or that during the time of attendance at ‘school, he or she is doing three hours of work a day of chores and housework: The bureau conducted this inves- ee ae counties, Pembina, lettin, ‘circe and Stutsman, Lo- ganvand Dickey e The agents visited 143 schools in 2,114 children of ‘the 2,674 children enrolled in the schools. Of the num- ber interviewed, all were below sev- enteen years of age. The ages at which the, ehildren included in the working. class had accomplished enough work to be in- cluded, included twenty-eight _be- tween the ages of six and eight years; “ninety<seven between.“ eight and*ten years, 212 between ten and twelve yars, 265 between twelve and fourteen years, 204, between four- teen and ‘sixteen years and ‘thirty- nine between sixteen and seventeen years. By sex the workers were dix vided into 581 boys and 264 girls. In general the report ‘declares these children were engaged in, the “simplest of farm processes,” Hore} than four hundred of them shocked grain. 48% did hauling of all kinds and 447 hoed. Opposite to this, prac- tically half of the children reposted had ,engaged in plowing. Four boys under nine years old reported they had engaged -in plowing. The diversification of work in- dulged in by these ghilGren is shown in the report of the many industries in which*they took part, the 845 | pupils having engaged in the follow- | ing different occupations: Plowing ......-..4 Diseing .....¢....6.. Harrowing (Spike) ..... -Grain Drilling -: Corn Planting”... Cultivating Hoeing ..... Cutting corn by. hand(. Cutting corn by machine Driving grain binder . Driving’ corn binder . ‘Mowing \......++ 2414 j Driving header box ....... Loading/ header box . Driving header Threshing: Hauling bundles Pitching to machine . Hauling water Loading grain Shocking .... Pitching Husking corn . Driving stackef or hayfork . Picking corn .. oe Picking potatoes Bucking hay . Raking hay Other field work The Jarge number of the younger children were found in the’ occupi- average was about the same for, all occupations from nine to fourteen years and from that age on up, the ‘occupations at the top of the list had by far the larger number of workers. The occupation of shocking grain for instance, one of the most, un:- versal of North Dakota’s occupations for a-certain time during the sum- mer vacation, was indulged in by one’.child under seven, six under eight; fourteen in the eighth*year, twenty-five in the ninti year, thir- ty-six in the tenth, sixty-nine in the [ eleventh, fifty-eight in the twelfth, seventy one in the thirteenth, sev- enty-seven in the fourteenth, thir- ty-nine in the fifteenth and twenty- one in the sixteenth year. While but twenty-one of the sixteen.year old of * the thirty-nine of that age indulged in | plowing, while all but two were ch- | gaged in hauling at some time di ing the year. | That the boys do not have a mono- poly of farm’ work in North ‘Dakota | is shown by the statistics for girls | in the above occupation. O fthe 264" girls reported as having done farm | work, the bureau reports the. fol-j lowing as engaged in different oc-| Harrowing Cultivating Hoeing ‘Cutting corn (hand) Driving \binder ...: Driving corn binder . Mowing. Hauling Po faced a Stacking Header Shocking Husking corn . Dtiving hay fork Bucking hay Raking hay . Other. field work tt THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1922 ITHE Moy WomAN MUST TEACH work Threshing Pitching Picking corn Picking potatoes Chicago—Women —@tudents Coffee 10 Minutes Oats 3 to 5 minutes ROWS os) ee rete, Now there’s an Instant Quak in the world. It cooks in 3 to a bitshel of choice oats. cooked. So , those small, reasons, get 1 —the. greatest, PUOER Wuins ¢ O59 Sw minutes, and cooks to perfection, =! 983 Your grocer has both Instant and regular. So you can, if. you \ “wish, have'the ‘oat dish ready before the eggs, or coffee. : ay u ye re e “Quickness, plus'super-flavor H ae, | UU 4 Pe Oats won: thelr worldwide: fame ie h Saver. They + |) 7 H r aged one e tube toa family ) lominate’ all'tHe earth over, because people love that flavor. "4 4 { ‘i They are flaked from aicen: graing.on ly—just the rick, plump, / H np aneert ree name aoe ae: Your Name javory: oats, We get put ten pounds of these. Iubcious flakes from . pon iil wank © any mae iS pacers Instant Quaker is flaked.from the same queen grairis, But the a iB, oem low. You wi . oats are cut before:flaking. They are rolled very thin and paftly ' /They use it . H Presented with a 10-Day Tube thie flakes are smaller and thinner—that is all, And a a of Pepsodent. thin flakes cook quickly. The dainty people you see, who show white teeth, H Tf you live out of town, mail at Hl { bay Probably users of Sepeodent. You see shen every- 1 aun nets es pce where. To women it means new beauty, new charm; to a Company, ‘0. ‘ Wabas! ie HE vonimant fiat cxaite favor, 998 out & raped men new.cleanliness. ‘To children it means*new protec- © Avenue, Chicago, and tube will * Oats. Get as style you like best.“ But, for one or both of those tion seein rch zou ave. iad chcti H be sent by mail, Pr sssemorerseneteevtneesetneecsooemnetintene waker. You want the utmost in this food of food: Present the coupon for a 10-Day Tube. Note how f esen food that pas eee clean the teeth feel after using. Mark the absence of the H 2 t coupon to, . viscous film. See how teeth whiten as the film-coats dis- ‘ f appear. Les t ( A few days will e¢ convince you that this i is a method . Lome i in package at left — the style | ‘eatendal to you and yours. Cut out the ¢oupon-so you H \ youhave always ‘known. | won't forget. 4 COW. AN’S DRUG STORE Instant Quaker Oats : | . ‘ | sacnd \T. OFF. ‘ PS. : RE Come in potas at right, ith the | Pa a. Al 4 FINNEY. SD RUG STO extra “Instant” fbel, Vey E2psa ‘ Gis LEN! qT 'O--~ ‘Your grocer has both..-Be sure to- | FOES U.S. a NHART DRUG CO: z SSSEE ' ‘get the style;you want. Roane The New-Day Dentifrice = H = ies Packed in sealed round. packages with removable covers | Now advised by-leading dentists the world over |! » | —————_— a . McLaughlin - } | community or your town. will very, ” Calmly ands easily; the’ widow uf! the.slain New Brunswick minister, score of newspaper “men and told her version of the tragedy. 25 a4 26 + | 22| | | S| (By the Avsacigted Préss) at Northwestern University outranked |' the men in scholarship.\ Instant Quaker Oats ‘ Cooks to perfection in 3 to 5 minutes ‘ "CITIZENS OF COTY 10 THINK A Funétion of Every Comiier:| cial _ Dera e: Says. | | | | | | \ | “The function of a eivie-commar- cial organization in any towh, / is that of teaching the public to think,” ‘aid J.H. McLaughlin to;the Execu- Committee at a special meeting | i held yesterday. \He explains that this’ jivas no reflection upon the’ thinking ‘| nowers of a. community, .but was a y of saying that ‘the chief task of | rcial club is. that: of’ selling | ity tO its ‘citizens to a: degree | which will mike them not only @hink [.sbout -it,-but go further, and plan anf work -for its future grawth. - | | \ “Thinking must’ precede . action,” 4 My, McLaughlin. pointed’ oft. “Any | for the @Neged “hammer slaying of ; Chamber of Commerce or. Commercial | for her husband’s Jove. | club'through its leadership. in ,think- | dington, and beyond him is Deputy munity. thinking “In the shmg terms | AAR eee | of development. When all arg think- | ‘ ing zbout “the future ‘of -Bismarck, by house: tops was made by Trish }ithen, Bismarck ‘will be in a way | Republican forces against the Well- |.t9 dognite advancement’ and gecam- | ington military barracks this after- vlishment. This will ‘be better un- | | derstood as the movement. for the re-organization gatherg® headway,” he | added, “Bismarck must, begin now to ; | thik of the néxt. step aie feanteto| Chicagq-—Sammy “Mandell, “Rock- take forward, if she hopes ‘to: keep | ford, IU., featherweight was matched iher place inthe march of progress to meet Joey Sanger of Milwaukee | of American cities.” for ten rounds at Milwaukee Novem- |noon. Three national army soldiers | were killed and 20 others wounded. “Nither Bismarck must, ‘get-to- | per 20, gether’ and go ahead, or stand divi - |ed aff go backwards. There can be| | Pri telasi no standing still. “It is a ‘sertens| Rome: Nov. 8—Prince Gelasio ayestion for the <itizens of Bis-|CAetani, a member of the chamber | marck ‘to face, but face it they’must. | of deputies, has been appointed Ital- | Either you musteget together and | ian ambassador at Washington, thinkWanselfishly gnd give generously | of your time to help develop yoru 7 I soon be beyond any help. ‘The best | | Way, to develop a real civic spirit, to | create a feeling of pride.in your | home town and to develop Ieggersti | for problems of all sorts, is for the | yisht: -thinking men nad women of the | ommunity to band themselves. to-| gether in a big representative and hard-working Commercial club.” | \ NEWS BRIEFS New York.—Fire damaged gainers | theatre on the Bowery, for the thir- ty years qne of ‘the ‘most famous | play house® in the .country. 7 Dublin, Nov. 8.—An_ attack: ‘with machine guns and rifles from near- Fa ( start making this test today. i] also the basis of tartar, o/ + Oate—the quickest-cooking dats CLARA PHILLIPS IN COURT Clara Phillips in court on.fhe first day of her trial, at Los Angeles, Seated beside her is her attorney, Bertram Her- ing, sets the remainder’ of the com-! one of thoie conducting the prosecution. | polls in the ‘United ‘For your sake and your family’s sake,.-~: . “wext.week and see the changes that occur. ‘Millions of people of fifty nations are now brushing teeth in this new way. Dentists get this free tube at your store. Film makes teeth dingy You feel on -ydur teeth a viscous film. It clings to teeth, gets between the teeth and A stays. Food stains, etc, \cloud that film. a Then it forms a. thin dingy coat., Film is > The ordinary tooth paste leaves much of that film intact. Thus most people’s teeth, until lately, were clouded more ‘or less. western’ polls. close, counting the votes ern time, p.m, on the* earliest The time. at 8 p.m. ballots. North Mrs,’ Alberta Meadows, fancied rival District Attorney Maxwell Burke, ALDOUS. | ete CLOSE WITHIN | impinge font oa 8-HOUR SPACE Chicago,” Nov. 6.—A ‘space of eight hours covers the gap between the earliest and latest closing o States on the November 7. election. Certain rural districts in the east, close at 3:00 p.! m., while it is 11:00 p. m., eastern | i canta pure. Film also holds food substance which ferments and forms acid. It holds the acid in contact with the teeth to cause decay. Germs breed by-millions in it. They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. Most tooth troubles are now traced to Then look fp everywhere are urging them to doit: You cin And, despite the tooth brush, they can see the results wherever you look—in —_ hecame almost universal. 2 - teeth that-glisten as théy never did before. Now see them on your own teeth. Go’ Now millions combat it Dental science has, for long, sought ways to fight that film. Two effective methods. have been fo’ Able authorities, by care- ful tests, proved them beyond ‘question. Now millions of people are using them daily, largely by dental advice. One method acts to curdle film, the other to. remove it. And this is done without the use of any harmful scouring agent... - Anew-type tooth paste has been created, based on modern research. It includes some new essentials and avoids some old mis- time, before ‘they last of the Virginia and West Virginia, clos- ing their polls at sunset, will start at 4:54 p. which will Pacific closing time country ts four rural polling plaees 4 in New Hampshire at 3 p. m. eastern Washington jand Oregon, closing cofst time, or 11 p. eastern’ ‘time, may know the result Lin some eastern states while their cwn vdters are still casting their Four states specify sunset for thé closing of the voting places. sun ‘will set first. on the, Virginia, Eleven minutes later, at 5: it will go down on North Carolina, aid at 5:38 in-Florida, no substitute for ROYAL Baking Powder. It.is made from Cream of Tartar de- rived from grapes and is ab- * Contains No Alum ‘ Leaves No Bitter Taste time zone line, which runs just west of -Bismarck,*the state ‘capital, closes, its voting booths at. different clock hours but ‘simultaneously in point of actu@ thwe, 10 o'clock’ in the central time zone and’ 9 o'clock in the mountain time territory, both corresponding to 11 p. m eastern standard time. Ae far m., be only coast. in the THE ELTINGE One of the most remarkable Para- mont photoplay productions of the current season is “The Loves of Pharaoh,” which will be the feature at the Eltinge Theatre, Wednesda; and Thursday. It is said to be equa to “Deception” and in. massiveness of construction’ and more than one hundred thousand persons’ were em- ie din the picture. Emik .Jan- m. The 05 p. s, Dagny Servaes and “Henry Dakota, bisected by the|Liedtke are te featured players. er A Spoonful of Purity” One uses s0 little baking powder in comparison with the other materials’ pie OTENY Bi Se Se aE . Free. At Stores Named Below 7 > One 10-Day Tube This-week only, any store named - below will hand you a 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent. Just present the coupon. Make this test now and watch the delightful effects. It will be a revelation. - Look Next Week | See how teeth: glisten when the film goes aid - Note what beauty you have gained ¢ takes, The name is'Pepsodent. These two \ great film combatants are embodied \in it. Some Pepsodent effect * Film coats are more readily combated. The teeth become highly Polished, ‘so film less easily adheres. Pepsodent also, multiplies the starch di- gestant in the saliva. That is there to digest ‘starch deposits which may otherwise fer- ment and form acids. rl It multiplies the afkalinity of the saliva. That:is there to neutralize theacids which cayst decay. \ Thus Nature’s great tooth-protecting _’ agents are given manifold effect, while soap-and-chalk pastes reduce their power. These results are bringing a new dental era in milljens of homes: the world over. And these whiter, safer, cleaner teeth mean life-long benefits. When you find them out, you will: want your people to enjoy them. s sunanseny \