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PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE i THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1923 Old-Fashioned Virtueg Are Al Very Well But get RRce —They Don’t Win Husbands WOODWARD BOYD “And.remember that the a man likes the spice of tionality. erage unconven- He's likely to overlook 14.—“The good old- rioned virtues are all very well . woman, but— the girl in his office, no.matter how hey don’t win husbands, beautiful. So that’s not the place for What will? her to look for a ch. Charm!” “Above everything, a girl shouid hus Woodward Boyd, author of] be herself in a man’s presence. Af- te Love Legend,” a novel which | fectation seldom is attra caused more discussion—and | samething is true of s ilusionment—than any in recent] ness.” ction, | Mrs. Boyd, in an interview grant- Mrs. Boyd's Tips on Winning | i to The Tribune, warned girls a Husband j= tinst the “love legend”—the myth| Acquire as many old-fashioned vir- |= it that a Prince Charming will] tues as possible, but don’t imagine ne, sooner or later, to eyery| that these alone will win you a hus- ung woman who waits long| band. j ough, The girl waits and waits| Don't be afraid to lead a man on dno such prince comes, and|—it won’t make him consider you | esently the girl finds she’s waited so long. But that’s negative advice—what vt to do, bold. if Don't imitate other girls’ methods isn’t method, it’s magnetism, MEN’S SUITS Boyd has inging vine” of the Victori- ve side, [ eis known now. as a “bone- 17 50 Charm,” she says, “is as impor- ° ant today ever it was. Be yourself, ee “Should girls make the advances] Don't be self-conscious, Men’s Suits in values up to $45. eyer? Well, they shouldn't be afraid Charm is as important today to lead men on. “The ‘love legend, rightly under- nothing intrinsically im- LOT 2 stood, can be turned to advant: issing. i too. In his heart of hearts every man, in his heart, think he’s $25 00 man thinks HE’S a ‘Prince Charm- a,Prince Charming and likes to be e ing’ and he falls for the girl who| encouraged in this belief. All Wool Worsteds, Tweeds, Blue Serges, values to $50.00. $35.00 Former values to $60.00. Suits of Blue Serge, Tweeds, Hockinam Worsted. The best that money can buy. puts her 0, on this opinion of his. In reality the Prince’ is—my husband, Don't mix up love and business— the office you work in isn’t the best | place to look for a husband, WELL BALANCED FARMING M. E. Bridston Wheat farmers of the country have for years been groping about in the only ‘Fairy LOT 3 the farmer are zealously working to remedy these conditions. Lower Cost dark looking for the fundamental a aliment lof thelr business, which,| ,, There ate only too alternatives— y shall agree, is not on a paying | °¥e™ Pi Sey into the merchandising field and gather in the profits of selling. The wise farmer is the one who does | MEN’S SHIRTS . “What can we do to right this condition,” is the question that is sounded-at farm meetings, bankers’ ; conference and in legislative halls, | >th-. The former is dependent on The famous Greenhood made from Western Woolens, “Quit ing swheat” aay the the farmer’s own business acumer. All Wool Fanc Plaid: Coe ay Une and efforts, while the latter depends y Ss. ouraged ones. But it is poor po! 9 cut off your nose to spite your ace, or kill the goose that SHOULD ty the golden egg, amd will lay mil- ‘ons of golden eggs providing we new how to treat her, The world weeds wheat more than any one hing, and consumers of wheat are willing to pay the grower at a price hat will give him a profit, and the onsumers of bread stuff today ‘o my a price for the product that vould give the grower an ample pro- $4.00 $3.50 $3.25 io fe ..... $3.50 on his wisdom in establishing a marketing machine and hiring ex- perts to represent him in the mer- cantile fie’ in which he, for the} most part, is unfamiliar, It is in the marketing end of wheat farming, where the profits, at the present time, are har ing to the report of the joint com- mission of agricultural inquiry of Congress, the average profit of the elvators during the years 1 Former value $6.00......... .....08 all Wool Broadcloth. Tan, Brown, Green. Former value $5.50......... All Wool Blue Flannel. * Former value $5.50 Feet eee te eee eae : ve ver a pr cents per bushel. |Z { Meee a He was. the reer o"| The terminal elevators, commission-|g Brown Mixed. any ie ah ne nap! men, and grain speculators reap ad- All wool .. Md es ae es , Increase Yield ditiorial profits that aggregate Mmil-| “Increase your yield per acre by| lions, all of which must be charged | Grey Striped Flannel. vacticing better farming methods, | against the wheat. Undoubtedly All wool 3.00 *e good seed, till your soil better| these profits, in many cases, are Posies eegigente RNS: 8.82 2/0018: 8 8 aie "is the advice of the agrono- ve, but it is recognized that ts. All recognize its saundness,| all lines of busingss, which performs Sexe Gna $2 00 id many do follow this advice to|a needed service are entitled to a AIMEE. 0 see eee ee let eee cee eee ees e heir gain, but others are in such a] fair profit, He condition that they cannot take ad-| Can these profits be reduced? eavy Ca on tle . $1.50 All Dress Shirts Discount 25%. antage of this~counsel, and will not » able to, until they get a price over the cost of production for what they already raise. What's the use of raising more wheat, if we are siready loosing money on what we Can the grower ehter this field of marketing and reap the profits on the sale of his own product? Can some. of the machinery of marketing be simplified so as to shorten the distance between the nave?” “is a question that can’t be| producer and consumer, in order answered by a shrug of the should-) that the price paid to the grower will crs, not effect the price of the finished But somebody is making money| product? on wheat, otherwise production and Questions Uppermost | D , > issn business for their health. The| ™0st in the minds of the producers, | farmer continues to raise wheat at| thousands of whom have entered the 4 Joss from force of habit, or with| Mercantile branch of farming, being | thig- ever-present optimism that he| Confident that they can be answered | may be able sometime to sell at a| i the affirmative, and that it will it. This cannot continue inde-| ¢ventually mean a well balanced ly, and no one who wishes to|47ming Program profitable to the ‘ this country prosper wants it{ PFeducer. ‘The only individuals to| the permanent betterment of apy te continue, ‘The banker, the mer.| Suffer. will be the unnecessary mid-| cultural conditions that this oe. “chant and the manufacturer, who aii | dlemen, who have become an econo-|. . . In the long run government depend on the’ purchasing power ‘of| mic burden to the country. aid cannot be made effective unless ie Wheat growers of the country have | the farmers P isa be organized, and followed the lead of the California | aliye to thefr own responsibility to LE THRO. AT fruit growers, the Southern cotton blish and ‘use practical instru- grewers, the tobacco growers, who| ments for the distribution of credits This and Save if Subject farming, but he is getting able sup- port to remedy this practice. President Harding, in ‘addressing a recent conference of representa- tives of co-operative marketing as- sociations from all parts of the Unit- ed States, aggregating a total meW- bership of 900,000 growers, spoke the following words: “I know of no siné glé movement that promises more help toward the present relief and ties for borrowing more money, but laws promoting co-operative market- ing.” In other words, quit letting the other fellow get rich on the sale of the farnier’s products, Is this movement going to be the fulfillment of the prophecy. uttered nearly thyee thousand ‘years ego? “They shall build houses and in- habit them, They shall not build and another inhabit. They shall plant ‘vineyards and eat the fruits of them; ,they shall not -plant and an- other éat.” hat is what the Wheat Growers are fighting for, and a careful an- glysis of present conditions, what thas ‘been .accomplished in the past, and what can ‘be accomplished through concerted ‘action, will satis- fy \the most skeptical that it can an is being done. . Cooperative Marketing In the first place cooperative mar- keting means essentially _ orderly marketing: With wheat, the custom f dumping from 60 to 90 percent of the product of a year’s efforts onto the market in 60 or 90° da: has - proved .particularly~ disastrous to the growers, The mark been hglutted at threshing time, and as a result the buyérs held the whip hand, and. bonght at their own- price. This’ practice, with orderly market- ing is done eyay with. The grower reevives an advance on his’ grain at. time of delivery to pay ens, b+ ‘ligationg,.and the grain is 'w long period of time, generally 8 have brought prosperity to them-j| and the assurance of the most eco- selves through cooperative market-| nomical marketing methods.” ing ‘ociations. Wheat Growers as-| Govérnor Nestos, of North Dako- sociations have been formed in ten| ta, when asked by the North Dakota states of this country for the pur-| Wheat Growers Association, to set Pose of marketing their grain in an| aside the week beginning Feb. 19, as orderly, businesslike manner, doing | “Wheat Growers Week,” gladly com- vaway with speculative buying andj plied by issuing a proclamation to selling, and getting the profits of this effect, thereby putting the offi= the sale 6f their products as well | cial of approval on. the associ- as increasing their bargaining pow-| ation and ‘the work “of the farmer- er by controlled and centralized sale.| members in their efforts to better looked upon with favor by | marketing condition: this state. the most far-sighted and conserva-| Governor Nestos has‘never hesitated. tive men in the country, who readily | to further movement of co-operative see the advantages of orderly, ‘con-|matketing, and in his recent inau-| trolled marketing, and the benefits| gural address, urgéd the passage of be derived by the grower. Boot- Tegislation that would facilitate this, ‘legging his product individually in| Senator McCumber ‘of North Dako- shi ins| ta ssid in: to the. ¢ and effective vs 10 days—Cash Only--10 days Men’s Suits and Overcoats. Boys’ Suits and Overcoats. Child’s Suits and Overcoats. Shirts, Underwear, Caps, Shoes and Over Shoes. A Sale That You Will Always Remember. Must Make Room YOU HAVE THE MONEY. WE HAVE ‘THE MERCHANDISE MEN’S OVERCOATS $12.00 CHILD’S OVERCOATS Chinchilla. Sizes 5 to 9. $6 75 e Former values 10.00 ....... teteeees Ulsters with Belt Backs, Semi Ulsters Belt Backs. ~ BOYS’ OVERCOATS Former values $25.00. Sizes, 5 / Te ete | $15.00 You will really have to see these coats to believe it. Medium and heavy weight Dress Coats, as well as Ulsters. Former value $30.00. BOYS’ OVERCOATS $18.00 — Sizes, - $ 8 50 o) Plaid back,, Freize and the fabrics that go to make ADO Bieccssoyeinlyo ih detour ince eee Wonderful values. You will be the winner. up a real coat. Oregon Woolens Mills garments represented. 4 LOT 4 _ MEN’S CAPS Sa ee BOYS’ and YOUTHS’ SHOES 23.00 MEN’S SHOES nai con ot eg and $2.75 MEN’S ARCTICS $25.00 Unusual values. Nd AVACL sc Sse eeu ee oust One Buckle $ 1 675 and $1 .90 : We have some real Spring Coats, wonderfully ; Only .... tailored and fabrics of the best. The season is ap- MEN’S MITTENS Velours and Cassimeres. Some with BEST & HUYCK, BISMARCK proaching. Good and warm. 60c to $1 50 two pair of pants...................--.. $10.00 l ‘ccc _————e—————————— ooo LOT 1 LOT 2 LOT 3 LOT 5 __ Leather front and back... BOYS’ SUITS In Blue Serges, Tweeds......,.............$7.50 These are rare bargains................:.$12.50 months, This also enables the grow- er to take adyantage of the gen- erally rising prices from fall until spring. According to figures com- piled by the U.S. Department of agriculture, and published in the De- cember 23 issue of the “Crop Esti- mates and Report’,” during the years from 1908 to 1922°there has been an average ‘increase of prices from the fall until spring of .33- 1-3. In only ong son during that time has there been a decrease and that was during the unusual deflation period in 1921. Pays Handling Charge According to government figures the average margin of profit of ele- vators operating in North and South Dakota during. the Wheat Growers hope to reduce and take unto the: selves. The Wheat Growers associa- tion in North Dakota pays the ele- vator an average handling charge of. 3 eents per bushel, ranging from 2 For instance, a manager of a Far- mers’ elevator ships a carload of wheat to the terminal. It must be sold on the day of arrival or go into demurrage. Grain dealers know this, and refuse to bid on the grain until just before the board of trade clos- and when they can buy at bat- gain prices, Furthermore there is a undertaking between~ commis- sionmen, in many cases, to sell; to each other at rock bottom prices and then the broker buyer in turn sells to the miller and gets the 5 to 30 cents per bushel premiums that mill- ers offer the Wheat Growers Asso- ciations, not’ being dependent ‘on commissionmen to do the selling, having their own selling agéncies_at the terminals, have turned the ta- bles, Seats on the board of trades at Minneapolis and Duluth have been secured by the Northwest Wheat Growers, associated, which is the selling agency “for associations in pens that cooperative wheat tops the market day after day. The premiums on Dark Northern No. 1 average 14 cents over May, according to offi- cials, and premiums on all, grades of Amber Durum average 11% cents. These premiums are all turned back to the grower less cost of market- ing, which will*not amount to as much as the bare commission charg- ed by the grain brokers. It is esti- mated by the officials that the cost of marketing per bushel will be less than one cent. The cooperative movement has put new heart into the growers for they see the light of a new day, when the farmer can follow his wheat to the miller, get..a just and reasonable price for his product, and be able to continue to till his acres with the assurance that at the end of the year he will not be penalized by loss- es for toiling that the rest of the world may be fed. STOPS COUGHS AND COLDS Neglected coughs and colds lead to influenza, Ta grippe, asthma and bronchitis, and the old method of ‘letting it run its course” is rapid- ly giving way to’preventive treat- ment. Three generations of users have testified to the quick relief giv- en by Foley’s Honey and Tar from coughs, colds, croup, throat, chest and. bronchial trouble. Contains no opiates—ingredients pririted on the wrapper, Refuse imitations “and sub- stitutes. sold over | thei Chest cold?-break it! to oi gts depending on the yolume| North Dakota, Mon! ae Jest of busirless. Theoretically, there is'a| Washington and Oregon. mples oi 7 saving of over 10 cents per bushel,| the co-operative wheat is placed om Apply Sloan’. It starts fresh warm id how much it will be practically, | the sales table in the Chamber -of -blood coursing freely through the pends on th ageney of the prefig- ably market the grain. Farmers’ Co: operative elevators, which are large- A owned by members of the associ- ation are glad to be relieved of the: hazards of merchandising grain, and are céntent.to do a strictly ware- housii business for they realize ie dicaps in competing ‘with Commerce, the wheat havifg previ- ously been tested for gluten and the exact milling value determined. Grain dealers, who are looking for profits on the resale of wheat, fird this table poor pickings, for F. L, Jeklin who is in charge holds out for pre- mium prices, and if he doesn’t. get what he thinks he should, he throws the wheat ‘into storage, Howeve: millers bid freely and it ‘often hap- {12} congested spot.Congestion breaks (4 oe ee vanishes] Vatism. ¢ Ses. SIFQINs ‘the eld line companies. . NaAlISM, DVMISeS. STTQl) Chest coids » ‘ “