The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 2, 1924, Page 2

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‘PAGE TWO EXPANSION OF STOCK RAISING I$ ADYOCATED - > Prof. Sheppard of Agricul- College Outlines Povsihitities prairi this state c an ryer than the state of New Jersey, and if well managed, might produce vnteld wealth in beef, mutton, wool, ilk or borse flesh if those in con trol and operation of the North Da kota prairic lands would choose to have it do so,” is the statement ot Professor H. Shepperd, antmat | husbandry at the North Dakota | Agricullural college and experiment tation There is room for many thousand more head of livestock on the prairies of tute, according, to Mr, Shep- If the Coulter joan bill passes number of livestock in the state " he states, | the will be greatly incre: “Pew people realize the value of grass und other plants and lew. know how y these humble | wealth producers of the prairie are | bused and handicapped in their ‘ork of production,” he added. “John Survis, the cow-boy botanist and icientific investigator at Mandan, vho“experiments in zing trials at che Great Plains station, has learned chat by a process of resting and ro- tating native pastures they will tund mor footl tothe These ex ng to Mr, system of tures, four tand ing and yield more | stock.” ments show, accord- | hepperd, that under a| rotation of native pas- | nd. one-fifth acres, wilt | much grazing as seven | acres will stand if the cattle are just turned in and left to graze and tram. | ple it for the whole season. “Grass grazed short is continu- | cusly handicapped,” said Professor | Shepperd, “while grass allowed to | rrow at the Season when it gathers he strength to sustain itself, occu- | the land, furnishes thee maximum ing and retainseits vitality and} he control of the soil. | “That is what I call literally mak- ng two blades of grass grow where one grew before. Then top, the sys- em of management which he carries on does not lower the carrying capa- city Gf the pasture, despite the heavy lead it carries. The silvery sage, which is the distress signal in over- grazed pastures, ia absent from the deferred and rotation fields, while it waves its branches in mute protest in the pastures where too many cat- tle are run continuously from spring to fall, “Deferred and rotated grazing has n trie d repeated for nearly vight years so there is no guess work ubout it. Bulletin No, 1170, recently sued by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture upsets the old- timers’ “dope,” too, about the big qains of the season occurring after the grass has begun to cure in Sep- tember and Octover. Here is what the scale beam shows in pounds of daily gain per each two years old steer. In June they gained three and three-fifths pounds in July they gain- ed two pounds, in Awgust one and two-thirds pounds, in September one and one-third and in October no gain ut as d that is being pagtured heav- ily needs its rest periods just as does land that is being cropped. The experiments at Mandan show that cattle are able to produce higher gains per head when they are pas- ture on land that is being: rotated.” The scheme of the experiments at Mandan, according to Mr. Shepperd, was to provide several pastures so that the cattle did not feed entirely off any one pasture. This allowed the vegetation a chance to secure a fresh start. Cylinder-- ECONOMY If in two weéks’ operation of your tractor you can make a saving on fuel and lubricat- dng oil to more than pay for having your cylinders re- ground, is not regrinding a rea] econom Many owners are reporting just such sav- ings. Figure it up! A .sav- ing of probably 25° on fuel and from 25% to 75% on lu- bricating oil amounts to a lot ‘on only a week’s operation. Then consider the time lost and expense incurred when you are ‘busy if you have to stop and make repairs. When cylinders are reground and properly fitted with new pis- ~ tons and rings, full compres- sion is obtained. The lwbri- eating oil does not work past the rings to be burned in the combustion chamber, nor is power . lost iby leaking into the. crankcase. These siv- ings, very apparent in the operation of your tractor, are correspondingly important with, your truck or passenger car, though not so noticeable. Regrinding Is An Invest- ment—Not An ‘Expense ‘the ‘cost of regrinding is mévy times repaid hy the éffected. In the long tim @ regrinding job is the ‘ st paying investment. Lect hapa ate temporary xt “est and only tend to ‘Merease the cost of ance. ‘Cannot Afford |LAW ROBS FIVE CHILDREN OF MOTHER DEPORTED AS BY EUGEN RIGHT AND EMIL, 9. Feb, 2.-—Five lit- iuuaanee N. Yup tle innoeent victims of our immigra- tion laws—the youngest two years old, the oldest nine—torn from their iother’s arms as she was being de- perted as “excess quota” can't find | much joy in this land of their dreams. ’ Instead they discover new. terrors daily, and they tell each other about them in whtspers she must be dead, gene. “Else come to me when I'm s: ways docs.” * sobs five- he would She al And his nine Tr head of the little Groupe of wiifortunates wean't muster up much courage to dissuade him. For he, too, has a suspicion that the worst has ‘happened Troubles M “Laws are es Youngster Old. made s this old tittle thistyears. “Nobsto look what it has to us—it has robbed us of our mamma, split. up our whole family, andsmakes us ery all day. “Vm not very oid, and I hope to lve many years. But | shall never forget the look on my mother's face as they took us away,” Tt was on the deck 1, Wise beyond jurt them. Yet done before iling time. Em four brothers and sisters, | deported with their mother | Pranz Dantes had bee daddy, who came and a half Since then he h: worked hard, saved enough to for his family, and built a nice lit- tle home in Long Island, The whole family was keyed ‘up for ppy reunion. But it never came, for the immigration auth®rities dis- covered that Mrs. Dantes bern on a Dutch ship in a Bel jport. The immigration quotas for |both Holland and Belgium had been jfilled. Mrs. Dantes, therefore, could jnot be admitted, d |that her husband had already ta jout his first naturalization papers. | But her children were of German birth. And that quota still was’ dpen. They could be admitted, if it was | proved there was no likelihood of their becoming public charges. This, wasn’t proved to the satisfaction of the authorities until just before sail- ing time. And the Came the ruthless parting. Without clothes, baggage, or even to America a ye TO -| Frosted, Basil Two Bear and Ben- S EXCESS QUOTA ; | | i PARATED HER. { “AND HER OTHER BE Li NG? EUGENE, 5 a Clesin hndkerchief, the mother was | sent back to any. She“even did | not have the chance to say good-bye to her husband! Some she may come back bur | i, won't be for a long timeg For the new quotas do not go into effect un- til July. In the meantime the moth- er, torn with the anguish of know- ing that loved will h her ones are e to shift 000 or yA Woman Without a Country! he has a sister in Antwerp,” a “But she can only cks at a time, for the wire of a German, in the eye Belgian She the wife of a he ‘tizen, red my intention of be- She can't come ted States because she in a county, whose quota exhausted. woman nto the was he has been ‘She's a without a coun try “The authoritics told me I could in, if L sailed with her and ht her back of the wife of a de- t of United States citizenship. I'm not wealthy, and can’t see necessity of plunging i to untangle such redtape.” but the absurdit Strangling in its meshes is the hap- piness of the little children. Four of them live with Mrs. Agnes Poul- soni, their aunt. She is very kindly, but her quarters are eramped. ‘Th baby with another relative in Brooklyn. The new heuse, which the whole family was going to keep aglow, re- mains deadly cold. INDIANS ASK - $40 PAYMEN' stays { Ft. Yates, Ne-D:oFeb. 2.— The ‘tribal busin committee which met here, asked* that Supt. E. D. Mossman recommend a per. capita payment of $40. It is understood that Supt. Mossman has recom- mended a paymenf, although- the ct amount which the Indian of- t Washington will a}low is uncertain, A committee of three was named to make financial arrangements having to do with ‘the proposed memorjal hall or monument. This committee consists of Thomas jamin White. THIS MAP SHOWS HOW THR ‘iain Pan” BO HOPE TO BECOME A FACTOR NV. WIBLDING A OF PR BALANCE sie sar ounlaene SELESTION, UP TO;CONG! “BY HARRY BO HONT ‘NEA Service Writer Washington, Feb. 2—A ~deadlock in the 1924 presidential election, with the “bal eld by pi @ressive third-party ‘electors fram the northwestern gricultural states, is the possibility being studied by. advocates of a’ third- |-party .moyement, as the probable linenp: of v6ld-party. {candidates and Polistes take’ shape. 3D PARTY MAY DECIDE PRESIDENCY PONENTS (1B NEXT CAMBPATON Porous IR OnSS MAY. THROW: THE Here: is; in brief, the® ‘sitdation as litis viewed by. third-paitty’ sdtaeate «Henry Ford's ‘withdrawal - 2 possible independen' vodmdidate Stand his endorsement: of: ‘Cogbidge*merely et him:as thet dutstandieg \in- dividual ;wroynd- bya i Pplitical | senti crease eB ‘ord’s . withdrdi@al ee changed ela an ie | bot! | may jof the third-part; jlieved a following can be drawn syf- \the standard-bearer to the new. par- ;Sured of 18 states with 199 electoral | _|fallow for third-party seed. iCovers Period of 25 Years; \ Biologist THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE isting political parties which is at the real root of ‘the third-party movement. This dissatisfaction already has expressed itself by the ousting of old-party senators in Minnesota and the election of Farmer-Labor senators, by the seating of Non-par- tisan League senators from North | Dakota and the shattering of party | ‘lines in Washington, Montana, Iowa ‘and Nel in the elections ‘ of | Senators Dill, Wheeler, Brookhart | and Howell. Delay Gives More Impet: ing, not subsiding, ac- itieal advices here, ttle prospect for legislative accomplishment at this session whick | can allay this discontent, with con- With Jno chance for the presidency—is in- | Jereasing. , The situation in the present Con- gress is lending much heart to third- party backers. It gives visual proof | jthat 1 third party need not necessar- | ily be u majority party to exercise a guiding, hand in legislation. If a new party can achieve for the next Con- gress a balance of power similar to that now held by the progressive froups in both House and Senate much greater headway can be mi than under a ict two-party or- | ganization of ‘Congress. if The Faymer-Labor party and the | WOMAN, DEMANDING EQUAL RIGHTS WITH MAN, POINTS TO LAWS sdiiacaciiaes <td AGAINST HER BY HAROLD B, MATSON NEA Service Writer ‘ Washington, Feb. 2—To the mifi- tant feminist man is a villain, He is accused’ of a gigantic con spirsey forbidding When under the Woman's jual the r of the dl their fight for thought they could con- feminists, National { pis t vince man with the logie of their jclaims. But in some 40 legislatures segvative candidates and platforms | last r the lawmakers displ: seemingly assured for both old-line | little sympathy for the pled agait {ps rties, the demand Yor's thikd party | discriminatory laws, responding that ven if only a party of protest, with | those luws were protective. So, proceeding on the premise that ‘man is an unreasdénable sort of cuss, | the women are gathering evidence to | prove their argument. Laws Codified For this work of combing cvery stute cade and cons the party calls ation,” and ¢ fying all unde head, the party chose Miss Kiama Wold, long connected with suffragist activi attorney, the better to under- thé intricacies of lew. She aw nights, while her party an stand Non-partisan ‘League offer centers from which such party organization ; spread. Each is repre: tative | craving. It is be-| jficient to make the new party aj {rent factor in the campaign. i Without conspicuous _ leaders! third-party sentiment has- united more than half the voters in Minne- sota and North Dakota, has attained secend place in ‘Idaho and Washing- ton, a close third place in South | Dakota, Montana, Nebraska and Ok- | Inhoma and substantial followings in Colorado, Texas, Kansas and Towa. In addition, to these, should Sey ator LaFollette consent to becoming ty, Wisconsin might be carried over into the third-party. camp bodily. Here's How It’s Figured The present lineup of states indi- | cate the Democrats are sure of 12] states with an electoral vote of 139. | ‘The Republicans are equally as- votes, Eighteen states are in the doubtful list, controlling 193 votes. It is in these that dissatisfaction and unrest are most rampant and the soil most In the division of these doubtful states a small group of third-party clectors, representing perhaps not more than four or five states, might constitute the could bar either of the old-party cgn- didates from election. In that “ease the election would be thrown into Congress. The ultimate result doubt- less would be election of the Repub- ican. candidate. But the prestige aceruing to the third-party group able to accomplish even such a temporary deadlock would make it a factor to be reckon- ed with and give it a wholesome footing for future growth. This is the point of view from which the third-party plan is being approached. There will be no ex- pectation of running away with the presidency, as the Bull-Moose party attempted in 1912. The man who heads the ticket must be contented with the chance to be the John C. mont of his party. Fremont, the t. candidate of . the Republican party in 1856, went down to defeat, but the footing gained in that cam- paign enabled the new party to be- come the dpminant party in Amer- ican affairs, $602,527 WOLF BOUNTY PAID IN NORTH DAKOTA Figures Given by A. C. Fargo, N, Feb. .2.—North Da- kota has paid out $602,527 in the past twenty-five years for bounty on wolves and coyotes, says R. S. Zim- merman, assistant biologist at the North Dakota Agricultural college. is amounts to an average yearly Lena of $24,101 toward the exter- mination of these predatory animals. “The yearly loss to livestock and poultry caused. by the predatory an- imals in the United States amounts to about 25 million dollars,” declares Mr, Zimmerman. “This is a direct drain on the livestock industry,” he adds. “The loss of a sheep here and there picked up by some prowling gnimal or the destruction of a few acres of grain by rodents perhaps does nog seem to be appalling but when it is a common occurrence throughout the state it is time to wonder what gan be done to prevent such loss.” In an effort to help ‘the states to exterminate these animal pests the United States department of Agri- culture through the biological bureau has been cooperating with the farm- ers and stockmen of ‘the country, ac- cording to Mr. Zimmerma “The number of coyotes, bobcats, wolves ‘and mountain lions taken! sinte ‘this cooperation has “been un- der way runs up-into the tens of théusands, while the number of in- Pepi of ground squirrels, — prai ‘dogs, pocket gophers cand ‘inckeabbits runs || into the millions,” the. biologist states. “The bounty system is being re: placed: in many ‘states by appropri-| ations for organized “poison _cam-' paigns ‘as the paying of bounty to encourage the destruction .of ‘rodent pests and predatory ‘animals has ‘not nwoven ‘to “b&.an ‘adequate ‘means of} control,. Thirteen state legislatures have recently ‘cooperated ‘with ‘the federal -bureau ‘by ‘passing eppropri- ation ‘bills caning tor ‘poison cam- ‘South Dakata ‘thas recently ‘appro-" Deket ataten. cooperating ‘with’ the 5 cooperating. wi akan are ‘fieinome, “Arkansas, balance of power that | _ her busy during the.days, Now she is a member of the Su- preme Court Bar in the District of Columbia. Her search for discriminatory leg- islution has resulted in a mass of volumes upon volumes of such laws. In various states, she found, fathers have complete control over their children, the earnings of a wife legally belong to the husband, women cannot serve on juries, di- voree laws are. partial to men, ‘athers can will away children from mothers, married women are classed | with children and insane as unable to contract on their own résppnsi- bility, and the husband can collect money damages when hi: jured. Other discriminations are | cited. | Their Demand “We want equal rights,” say the women. “We don't want to suffer handicaps placed upon us by law and custom. We doh’t want to be barred from industry open. to man. “We know there are some things beyond our strength, but there need be no law about it.” So Congress is asked to adopt the Lucretia Mott constitutional amend- ment. It declares: len and women shall have equal rights through the United States and every place subject to its juris- diction.” That is all, = s wife is n-| Miss Wold first decided to become { ithe legi evidences to show that American women are denied: Equal inheritance rights. « Equal control of national, state and local government. ‘Equal opportunities in Equal opportunities in government service. Equal opportunities in professions and industries. Equal pay for equal work. FES EARNINGS. IBELONG TO HUSBAND i NY PAY MISS EMMA WOLD BE TS ER 9 What Women Are Denied When opponets of the equal rights amendment assert that * so-called discriminatory legislation is actually protective islation, the National Woman's Party produces volumes of * * Equal control of their children. Equal control of their property. Equal contro] of their earnings. Equal rights to make contracts. * Equal citizenship rights. California, Colorado, Idaho, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Okla- homa, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Wash- ington and Wyoming. The federal de; argment has developed a special poiso process and methods for its distribution, explains man, “More than 200,000 square miles have ‘been covereq by . organized Poison campaigns during the past year,” he states. “It is estimated that during one year no less than 75,000 coyotes alone have been taken. Mr, Zimmer- poultry “Durii hunters sealp otes lions. taken 1 sidered fort is By killing harmful animals they are known to cause damage to coyotes, mountain lions livestock wolves an annual savi “Hunters operating on the range 000 as report that it is not the unecommen of 29,300 predatory which 599 were wolve: The Best Tool An axe in the hands. of a crazy man is a will be ac ing the have ts from 10 to 15 dead coyotes near a le poison station. One reports th were found. An- of | other hunter collected M after put- 25,622 coy-| time out baits on a poisoning line 5 mites in-length and from another on comes the tidings that after placing 400 baits in the vicinity of no cf-|a ru res, 57 dead coyotes unless] wer a stockman cov- thing to find Besides those the also| s 01 bears. r is con- a game animal, and made to take them For a Big Job serious. menace yet we dd not conderfin the axe \ A for its wild or foolish application. dvertising can be—has been—sometimes misused. Like al all great forces, it must be intelligently planned and directed. In me big job of reviving American busi- _ hess, advertising i is the best tool that money can buy. “Let’s ise it —boldly and well! : Published by The Bismarck Tribune, in co-operation with The American Apsociation of Advertising Agencies J |tish an open forum, |and sombren ering the same county found 60 more that had not been sealped by the hunter. N. P. EMPLOYES ~ WILL BOOST Elgin, N. D., Peb., 2—More chan twenty Northern Pacific Rail company employes met at the Noi thern Pacific depot Tuesday ing of this week, after the of their train’No. 161, and organ- izeh a Northern Pacific Club, consisting of employes eated at points Flasher to Mott in clusive, The ob, “ct of the Club is to ere yperation mong the employes, and to estab: through which they may express themselves, and show the interest they feel in tie better welfare and propriety of the ER 1 18 spicr DE rman Sur- roanded¢ by memory of the persons he had be | headed, Paul Spaethe, public execu- |tioner, was found dead in his apart- ment, having shot himsel’. Spacthe | had been public executioner for ei zht sand ‘his nerve’ was _unshaken, funtil the death of his wife a fey weeks ago. Delmonico’s, New Yor er a restaurant but an antique shop. |The former atmosphere of gayety |has C/iarted, leaving the cobwebs of antiquity , is no Jong- TRAINING LEADS TO $UCCE$$ Eight months ago, The Hull Insurance Co. employed Cecelia Kieffer, through Dakota Business Collgge, Fargo,’ N. D. low she ig head of a department, and another ‘Dakota’ girl, Vina Kohoutek, has her old place, C. E. Lillethun, new general manager of the Mon- tana branch, Globe Auditiitg Co., was not so long ago a “Dakota graduate. A thorough education soon pays for itself. A cheap hurry-up course never pays. ‘‘Follow the ucce$$- ful.’” Monday’s a good day to be- gin. Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D. Auditorium Over The Hill TO THE POORHO Not a me a great Mon., Feb. 4 D. Matinee 4:00 ight 8:15, ONE DAY ONLY Seats now on sale at ‘Har & Woodmansee. m. 45 aeeillen: lighted ing ‘

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