The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 28, 1923, Page 3

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SATURDAY, JULY 28,1928 | aes ; a eee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~~ ~~~ PAGE THREE pcb ace ce ed er : : 5 ad NEW DISE ASE “CALL ME MAGNUS,” BEGS WESTERN DIRT FARMER, ELECTED SENATOR steady, Week top $12.25. Sheep! HERE'S PROOF Weg DISCOVERED IN = (ae WHEAT FIELDS 4 } Black Chaff Found in Epi- a 4 demic Form for First Time | At Experiment Station WEATHER FOREC: : Fot Bismarck and vicinity: Gener- ally fair and cooler tonight and Sun- day, p For North Dakota: Generally fair and cooler tonight and Sunday. General Weather Conditions Precipitation occurred in the Great Lakes region and at scattered: places in North ota and along the north- eastern Rj lountain region. The , weather ik generally fair in all other districts, It is considerably cooler in the Mississippi Valley and Great. Lakes region this morning and cool weather prevails in all sections. Road Conditions ‘Bhe roads throughout the State are generally in good to excellent condi- tion, North Dakota Corn and wheat MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR. Minneapolis, July 29:—Flour 10 cents lower to unchanged, $5.90 to $6.20. a barrel. Shtpments, 60,554 te rrels, Bran unchanged, $20.50 to $21. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, July 28, | No. 1 dark northern’. No. 1 northern spring . No. 1 amber durum .. No. 1 mixed dugum No. 1 red durum |No. 1 flax . |No. 2 flax No. 1 rye Too Late To Classify | Fargo, N. D., July 28—Black chaff, a bacterial disease of wheat, has jmade its appearance in epidemic form this year in the wheat “fields pf North Dakota for the first tiie so a s records go at the North Dako- Auiehter nt ae bear ee ta Experiment station, according to FOR RENT—1 modern well furnished RIsWAR 46.69.0656 Dr. Wanda Weniger, plant. patholo- Fast front room. Two gentlemen Bowbells 83 60 0 C gist, who declares that she recently prefereds Telephone 832J, 216-2 S i a4 68 0 6 inspected fields where the damage : 83 58 0 C from this disease will run up to 50 | aruneEEaeniae Dunn Center : a 63 0 C peteant FOR RENT—A large front room suit- Bilndale|. 6 0 Ch “This disease has been found to able for two ladies or gentlemen, valerian. @ one cceur in North Dakota for several also a small sleeping room. 810 iftatid “arte 80°85 01 6 years past,” Miss Weniger stated to- Rosser, Phone 834W 7-28-3 Tammestowal- oe) 83 48 0 Cl day, “but never before, so far as our SEPT ats 83 50 0 C records show, has it appeared in epi- WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eee a a be demic form here. The disease was 6 ; Larimore eral housework, Mrs. Gordon Cox, 4 first found in epidemic form in 1915 316 W. in Kansas. In 1918 black chaft caus- ranging up to 50 percent in South Dakota and Montana, This year there will be a considerable loss front this disease in this state, as it is widesp but fortunately is eon- fined to dual fields and has no where near reached the magnitude of the black stem rust of wheat infec- tion. “The disease manifests itself by 7-28-tf room, suitable -27-3t YOR RENT — Lar, for two, 522 2nd St. FOR SALE—Almost new Chevrolet roadster, several Fords, and Dodze roadster. Corwin Motor Co., Bis- marek, N, D. 7-28-3t Moorhead . » 7% 56 0 C. C, clear; Cl, cloudy; PC, partly cloudy. Orris W. Roberts, Meteorologist. ELKS NOTICE FOR SALE — Overt id, 90 touring em digeoloratins and. attipes® gerstee MAGNUS JOHNSON LIKES TO CARE FOR HIS HORSES. ue | $180 cash, SHH aerate All Elks are requested to * 3 stems, leaves and the glumes which CERTAINLY LOOKS HAPPY IN THE UPPER LEFT-HAND PHOTO. Py aaa « a bRede meet at Elks hall at 2 p. m. Bd cover the: Keruelsn the heal, the THE SENATE WON'T SEB HIM THE WAY HE IS IN THE UPPIn | 468M. cra Monday, July 30. to escort the | color of ma ranging from NIGHT-HAND PICTURE, BUT HIS NEIGHBORS OU'T IN MINNESOTA Los ineen eae ERE, |. This 75-pound, five-and-a-half toot | * Ae ey, ave 1 @ vellow to ¢ebcold¥@tbtown and black, Te sHARS: JOHNSON, WHO HELPS “MAGNUS” RUN THE FARM, |EOST—Twenty-five dollars reward |.) <5: pound, five-and-a-half foot remains of our late brother, i the lak€ bas tha thoit common: Tag 1S SHOWN, (LOWER LEFT), MILK NE OF THE COWS. for any information leading to re- Meio, Hudson I y—only to be caught | A. W. Lucas to city Auditor- di eis easily confused black covery of my double barrel Parker by Edward Steve n, in the Saskat-| jum where funeral services af stem rust, and has somewhat of the Edmonton, Alber- shot gun. No questions asked, A. River r j ane : red bret = | 240 ar ago, Cagh No. 1| W., Mellen, Phone 838, ¢ 7-28-14 ospector_tarmer, | Will be conducted by B. P. O. j wees Gace MARKET NEWS |)i:siv2,f20%8 ath St ee on na proetortamer,| wil be condueted b f | + fected yiilfs, “Heads are also dwarf- iene Shines aera oe «| ASK BUSINESS Signed, Alex Roéer, Exalted Ruler. “Counties from which specimens of diseased plants have been secured OFFERINGS in toad attest te"etiag | MEN TO AID THE, | ~~ 1 cupation will place upon them. The : | incliue Geen ENCE Wale oe $1.05%; September $1.04%3 De- REHABILITATED | covernment can only venabititnte and Stop that slouchy walk. { Henry, Burke, Williams, McLean ‘ seer ee Ae ees RY ae, train ‘the’ men’ wp. te) the ipUint/ of | Wy Gene ainid “Grinpes (SHOES \ ~ Morton and McKenzie, and it is pro- BY GEORGE BRITT milked seven of the family’s 24 Oats NOUR 2 85% to BEKe, An appeal to ‘local business men Halen ee A LG a d pe! 1 { bable that the disease is present in NEA Service Writer cows before going to Minneapolis parley ent, BORO hoe hil towassiavan absorbing into industry ng interests of the country| for men and women properly Man county of the state this year.! Kingston, Minn. July 28—| to receive election’ returns. “Ma” iRvelnol 3 toa imiGon the three or four thousand disabled | must carry on.” fitted. Alex Rosen and Bro. ; Marquis and Kota wheats seem to be|“You've come a long way jast to|and Magnus will take the younger lax No. 4, $2.61% to $2.66% war veterans who are completing “i Ser iuscentible to attacks, also some|see an ordinary Minnesota farm-| three children to” Wachineton ; pee P| government training courses monthly | == Sie of the durums, including Kubanka. | | er,” when they go. Wheat Depressed at Opening ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK was made today by the Chamber of Similar bacterial blights attack) ‘That is the comment of the By a back door the senator leads 5 ST. PAUL LIVE! Commerce of the United States, The 4 ariey and oats, and specimens of af-| neighbors in this village, 10 miles| his visitors through the dining} on Chicago Board of Trade So. St baulydulyson— Cattletre: | ational: Chanbesveatibvatisntionits j pared Plants have been found near/from the railroad, when’ an inter-|room to the “sitticn rong ite : Celpts 100: Markeu(comipared wii |e ciiieationewhichiraits Gn the Fs ~ Fargo. | Rust is causing heavy dam-| viewer asks the road to the farm| kitchen is sa the rear, but in the k ago, good and choice grain f LEAGUE BASEBALL Bismarck vs. Valley City At 6:15 Tonight. , Also July 28 and 29 e j : ith: large | fed fat steers, yearlings and she-j business interests of the country heat here, 900 cags,| stock about steady: Common and |‘? cooperate with the government to nge to these two crops this year, par-|of"Magnus Johnson, dining roonr is a sink with a pump] Chicago, July 2: cularly to barley, The same red And when the visitors arrive at| atthe end instead of water faucets, receipts of ‘ $ s h 4 tha 1 of : wick ereupced on the wheat plant|the old white six-room house over-|On the sideboard stand freshly | With deliveries being made on July! medium grades mostly 25 or more | the end that all of the men be given .Which infect other wheat plants will shadowed by a huge barn, it is al filled kerosena lamps. centrac d with sales of wheat | | r. Canners and cutters weak |¢™ployment, and offers a number of also infect barley plants, and many perspiring, overall-clad ‘farmer,| Lillian goes back to clearing the|t0 go into store here, the wheat ts lower. Bologna bulls ical suggestions for the guid- fields of barley have been observed with two dogs bounding beside | dishes from the table and scrapes |Prket here today showed a dowm+| around 25 cents lower, Stoekers {nce of local chamber of commerce within the past few days which are him, who comes out to give them| gravy from the eloth where the|W#rd tendency during the early| and feeders mostly 25 to 50 cents| in the work. The appeal was re- literally covered with black stem welcome. His “impressive. sincer-| children had spilled it. dealings, Uneasiness —regardiQ3|jower, Bulk prices at the close| ceived by the local A. of C. rust of wheat. Leaf or crown rust is ity and eatatonGombnt don’t ap-|_ As Magnus talks he opens let-|ermany’s governmental and finan- at steers and yearlings $6.00 to} “The men who are being trained,” Se ate pear until later. ters at a small roll-top desk in|‘i#! difficulties counted as an ad-| 10,00, Fat but cheap cows and | rays the National Chamber ace wen, “The black chaff disease is believ- |/ The neighbors phrase of “ord-|the sitting room. There are two| ‘itional decreasing influence. The} jcifers 00 to 0. Canners|ed in many lines and are prepared q ed to be carried over in the seed from inary” fits Magnus Johnson so“far| sections of bookcases over the|0Pening, which varied from wa-| and cutters $2.25 to $3.00. Bolog- | to meet adequately the physical and year to year, and the only remedies | 3. hig appearance on the farm is|desk, but the books consist al-|('@uged figures to one-half ca@ft| na bulls $4.00 to $4.50. Stockers | mental demands that their new oc- are eat Out alll “light-welght| concerned:,/He ia, slightly, below | moat entirely of volumes of Min-|!0Wer, with September 96% to 971 ing feeders $3.50 to $5.00. Calves ‘ Selon tye, most apt to ‘carry in-| sverage height, but broad of-frame, |sosota legislative proceedings.! cunts, and December $1.00% tol tine. Compared with week 880) > eee fection, and to treat ‘with formalde- His hair is brown with a bald spot | Most conspicuous on the walls ar 31.00% was folloyed by a materfal) 1 calves about steady. Best a nya oaales (soy; at ps snare ae may on top, and his bushy mustache is| old-time enlarged portraits in tar, thack all around, Da lights $2100 6 Oe puke >be carried inside the kernel. The| 22a! vn. Sma ight-blue}Wished gilt frames, showing Mag< WADA AN Gre {| steady with packers trade of Fri- formaldeiydp treatment will) not tue Seater ona an ope Ue ea ea taltgtyaiesn, ew ering. Make nie HECAGO LAVESTOCK | Gay Butcher “and” bacon’ hows cron Pi PaNcHon’ Of 2 disease-free Cy or. chick: glAMNeY OTE laa squares tM, children les ia conte) se HOT Coe eentn ena $7.0, Packing sows $5.57 to $6.00. 2d 7 ' u cut. cheerful, alert. face. the sitting room. AIcNiyIbeat at to sell at $10.49], Sheep __ receipts 00. out, * 4 \ is picturesque crudity exter-| Magnus tells his visitors that he| “eighty beef steers to sell a $10.59 steady. Bulk native lambs $11.20. Py NORTH DAKOTA [nai wartarsaue ‘anything. but | was born in Sweden 52 years gee | {2d above. ‘Top matured stecrs For the week lambs $1.00 to $1.25 [1 na A LUCKY IN RAIL _ | e'dinary in the ‘Senate. Aside|He. got good marks at school but SO es ees. U IN from the ordinary is a striking |left when he was 12. He worked 3000 2 —— — FREIGHT RATES | similarity in appearance to Theo-|on coast sailing vessels developed ttically all direct. Fat lambs dore Roosevelt which this rustie/his lungs in ‘a glass factory and| ‘°¢, 0 $1.00 lower, TYPEWRITERS eae a at 20. After a Hog receipts 8,000. Steady to 19 radical is delighted to hear refer.|came to Am " cents higher than Friday's aver- z; (Continued from Page One) | Teq'Go, few ycars as a lumbeifiacly the | Cents higher ceive alt Eeeray ey sbarate nslut PR) A ee moved to the farm which is home |22e: Practical top $7.85. as wheat and ships it out as flow: Ci F; . tedhy, paying $15 an acre for the : Ty and the level of intrastate rates se-| First greetings inélude the new| fier 4q one, te an MILL CITY GRAIN Minneapolis, July 28.—Wheiat receipts 195 cars ‘compared wiih parately. A large portion of North| title of “senator.” eis van | Oraanive: Dakota farmers, he said, do not use} “Call me Magus,” says the “I chopped over all this land my- tromit, 1 fansit rate mor benefit! sonator, and the manner is any-! soif.” he tells you. “For 16 youve qfrom it, A thing but a pose. I hauled cordwood to town, and Teht aeectlman, assistant general| A sich “Swedish accent shows as| the fiest orpariome Lovee ad oe freight agent of the Great Northern,!he bellows his words in the con- to get a fair price for wood.” j the chief witness for the railroads,|versational tone which ean ean bo Organizing: has been Ws hobby began his testimony by stating he! heard on the next farm. The ac- instead of-golf. He “had 10 jobs wished to make clear the differenes| cent. will be found to include) moteed 9 hastells you. Heshan Loud between a terminal rate and a local /<Sentlemen” for ' “gentlemen,® | 84, one Raa tee nae ela rate “the terminal rate is that from|«fery” for “very” and Hshores” | Vatious, town UB offices, and ae CAPITOL Last Time North Dakota points to Minneapolis | ¢ 4°" norer.» ; ‘i ¢ ! res, stale senator, ie Tye ates heat at | ue Mags, Jokinen! Jun-|""UR Te Loy th tan” a TONIGHT it being the latter that the tailroad| 10%” be says, as he seizes his| explains, and, incidentally” he stage-frightened 14-year-old name-| shows more pride in his register-. y \ | abhe ternifnal Fatecie this, territory: gake and, drags him forward for| ed short horn bull than in his elec- ie : A ~, | introduction. tion, ' which benefits the farmer for it has] “Magnus is a very good boy,”| "like to do. the chores around a large bearing) on setting the price |®4Y8 the father, his blue eyes shin-|the farm. We're poing to build of his wheat,” said Mr. Beidelman. |in& through over-thick, spectacles} a good house some day. That's He declared, speaking for the Great |aNd_ his teeth showing in a broad] a fine barn. Now we want a house Northern Railroad, that its history|Smile under the bushy reddish] to match the barn. But we'll have showed it had been willing to make|mustache. | “Magnus has to work! to pay the mortgage first.” reductions in freight rates when con-|hard on the farm. He was born! It is suggested that Washington ditions warratited, on the Fourth of July. Who says | will be different from the serenity Why Low Level I am not patriotic?’ of the farm. A “What brought about the unusual-| ,Then are introduced the others) “Those fellows “ere ain't going ly low level of terminal rates which |0f the family—“Ma” Johnson, alto jearn ‘me anything,” says Mag- benefit Notth Dakota shippers of |large, pleasant-smiling, unaffect-| nus. “I’ve been going to school in grain?” he asked, and then went in-|ed country-woman; Lillian, 23, Vic-| polities since I was a boy in the to details as to the Canadian rates. | tor, 21; Francis 19; Agnes 10, and| old country. I’ve been to Wash- He referred to the Crows Nest | Florence 9. ington a couple of times, and Pass agreement and the Manitoba Family of Workers 2 they’re not going to slip anything agreement regarding freight rates in]~“They bore the burden of farm| over on, me.” 4 Canada. He presented a report of|work during the campaign. One| _ Again it wasn’t a pose. Magnus W. J. Lanigan, of Canada, on this| election day Mrs. Johnson herself | is convincing. . subject, the report, he said, showing It SSS CAME EAE eeaall the Canedian, tallzonds thay Duluth, 375 miles, 19.5 cents; Har-| at issue, while 727 carloads of flour, were enabled to fix lower rates on|rold, South Dakota, 375 miles, to| were shipped on the intra-state rates, grain in Manitoba to Fort William | Minneapolis, 30 cents; Judson, Minn-| or disposed of within the state, He and Port Arthur than American rail-|esota, to Chicago, 375 miles, 24 urged-this.as showing the little ben- roads, : gents; Bingham, Nepean to Ones, efit he faid could result through any res forthern, he said, built | 375 miles, 25.5 cents; ayer, Ill, to] change in e intra-state rate. es one oer into Brandon, Por- | Chicago, 375 miles, 21 cents; Spear- Mill’s Position SATURDAY tage La Praifie and Morden, Canada. | Ville, Kansas to. Kansas City, 375} J. W. Goodman, traffic manager 5 E 2 : It was confronted by the low Cana-| miles, 20 cents. a * | of Grand Forks Commercial club who , i I can surely do it, as Iam in touch with all dian rates after the agreements were| His comparison showed a lower)#ppearéd for state mill and elevator - — : made and also by the Interstate Com-| terminal rate for North Dakota than] at Grand Forks, declared today he nerce Commission ruling under which |for the other states. Rates in terri-| believed that “we established. the it could not charge o higher rate|tory south of North Dakota had been equity of our position.” from points in North Dakota to Du-|fixed by the Interstate Commerce |: “Our position is,” he continued, luth and Minneapolis than it could/ Commission which are higher than| «what the present rates into and out from the Cagadian pointe‘on its Foed | the tateratate, rates of Nori Dako-| r'ceand Works on a transit arrange See Eee eee Gee OTE eit | mane ae at’ presont’¥or Nighy. partite 4 " its rate in Canada to get business r i : i ‘ ‘ : Fe anditi caused aoreductine de North |low, Admitting that the intta-state a af here abs pane te Sl a , make your vacation a success. Dukota, he said. An additional fac-| freight rates are higher than the in-| Miles: heling chs he cee te : val ei tor, he, said, was that farmers would |ter-state, he declared the inter-state| the marke’ ine. Mis our au ‘ody haul grain from North Dakota to|rates were no proper yardstick for| throughout the sou ab oat © Canadian shipping stations to get the | measuring rates: portion of the state. We are’ beng, adi He presented another exhibit which | ing every effort to make the lour of : , ' i ba oes te today, he add-| showed the intra-state rate of North the state mill available to: all North f 3 ed, was not meeting Canadian rates | Dakota on 100. pounds of wheat, car-| Dakotans Possible. We realize the A . } ¢ on its Canadian branches. load lots, was 22% cents for 200] mill was ‘built and~ owned by the “The farther away you go from |miles; South Dakota east of the Miss-}'people. We are making every effort - ° a Bismarck, North Dakota : Canadian rates the nearer you come} ouri river, 22 soit South Dakota,| to clear away anybard iers’ that commission is investigating. CHARLES JONES ‘ —in— WEST: OF CHICAGO \ a comepy | BIASTES OUR GANG COMEDY | Migs nena AT SEASTRY ent =. —--ABAVID. SMITH. SROOUCTION, —. = ae : ss ; se OREN GEN ) go, luggage and sports equipment and scores Mr Oliver Towne E '‘ALL-OVER TOWN) Before you take your vacation there’s lots of things you'll have to consider. A place to of other things. Let me help you find the things you want. the neighboring resorts as well as all the home_ folks who will have the things you’]l want to E to a proper basis,” he said. west of the Missour! river, 32 cents; | preelude them from a full utiliza- Rate arlson Montana, 23% cents; South Dakots,| tion of the mil) and elevator. We He presented exhibits intended tojeast of the Missouri river to Iowa,| siso. find the itbound rates are a show that North DikG, Tervnoty abe fired i ie ae Commerce | serious aang for _eeonotaieal lower rates to terminal markets | Commission, ; mil tor.” a Wuetarners in other states, ex-| Another exhibit showed that dur- Periised as SGN ane Slavaten: ing 1922, 2,842 carloads of flour } 3 le Soi Resight pe? tn bestia cents-per made in’ North Dakote ‘and shipped Big.dance at Riverside Sat- pounds——Devilesalanke,:NerRivte out-making the inter-state rate-not|urday night, Ps Monday: and Tuesday F COLLEEN MOORE:and JAMES MORRISON ; ‘im “The NthCommandment” ‘sand, Round Six, “Fighting Blood” 9°: . /* “THE GALIROF THE WILD”. ry

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