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PAGE EIGHT WHEAT FARMER’ TO “CASH” IN IS INDICATION i Prosperous Times Are Ahead With Change in the World , upply, Claim } i SHORTAGE IS) CAUSE | Chicago, July Prosperous times for the wh States:in nent millers, in the grain The significant 16 1s that pro. duction in the leading countries of the northern hemisphere with the ex ception of the United ex J to be 300,000,000 bushels short t year. This country will yield rand pe urmers of the Unit licted by promi- | and opera about as much as last ye bly more, the spring wheat outcome to be determined The deduction is that the United States will presently dominate the world price It seems to be the s locally that, regardless of how muc favorable w counters from now on, recover sufficiently — to where near the freak yield of 000,000 last year. The probable production in Cana ye range from 5,000,000 to 000,000 bushe! Little Wheat Booked Cash grain men in Chic has been very little wheat booked to come this way. It is possible wheat} farmers will hold their grain back corn farmers did the past two y Millers in the United State been actively buying ut the} past few weeks, It is said flour trade! yood that amulation of stocks is impossible and the necessity of hedging is relieved Speculation in wheat and other grains is gradually broadening. Last week over 500,000,000 bushels of grain was traded in, a gain of 100 per cent over the previous week’s business. Corn Remarkably Strong Corn displays remarkable strength Prices registered further sharp gains the past week. Cash corn and the nearby deliveries in the pit are firm- ly established above the dollar level. Old corn back in the country is not plentiful and app farmers are holding onto it Offerings lately have been above the market quotations. The outlook for the new crop is still poor. Some grain men are not so pessi- mistie about the final outcome of the ¢rowing crop. They state that a cold, wet spring, as was experienced this yeur always means a late and mild fall. If such weather is rea it is possible the corn will e pretty fair recovery. Oats displayed strength with other grains. it will not come any 470, estimates on is so HARMONY IS BEING SOUGHT Committees Continue Work at Inter-Allied Conference London, July 21. forts to ar- rive at understanding and iron out disputed points between the Brit- ish and French tod occupied the «committee of the inte lied con- ference which will attempt to put the Dawes report on reparations into execution. While some progress hag already been made in adjusting the va cus complicated viewpoints, sev- eral questions are yet fa from settlement. The matter of arriving at an agreement on economic valuations has proved somewhat complex, and, although there are divergent views among the British, French and Belgian delegations, it is be- lieved some understanding in re- gard to this point will be reached. CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY Observe Hazelton Couple Their 50th Wedding Day With all the immediate and friends from miles around and Mrs. W. E, Wallace today relative: ar celebruting their golden wedding an- niversary, at their farm home west of Hazelton. Mr. and Mrs. ried July 21, 1874, in Parisburg, Ohio, and after living a short time in Michigan and Ohio, came to North Dakota in 1904, having lived on their homestead in ‘Burrough Emmons county, ever since. They have eight children, ‘all o: whom are here for the occasion: Mrs. Hazelton; Mrs. Eva Gertrude Winnie Craw- Myrtle Minda Ethel Jenkins, Swartz, Bismarck; Beard, Brittin; Mrs. ford, Deshler, Ohi Woodruff, Bismarck ee) Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. ral belief | her the Canadian crop] a this] ° yo say there! possible. } _ Mr. Wallace were mar- township, | time by virtue of his recent victory at Jones, St. Paul; Miss Madge Walia jand Willie Wallace, who both liv at home. There are 36 grandchildre and 1 greatgrandehildren, all here to st the grandparents in making | the memorable one. | An elaborate dinner was served at following which there for the children, and a special for the entertainment of r guests, Mr. and Mrs, Wal- | lnce were noon, were | m of their children in Marion County, West Virginia, and) Mrs. Wall who is 66, was born in| Parisburg, Ohio. FIRPO AND PARTY HELD Scuth American Fighter De-| tained by Immigration Officers ALOR) Argentine named ght. Firpo, weight, and a woman a Lourdes, listed as the stenographer, and two members of his y were held by immigration authorities upon arrival from Argentine on the ground th their passoprts had been insufficient- ly vised. Firpo and his compan | rived on the steamer American Le-| gion this morning, were ordcred , er’s sustained | sent to Ellis Island. In addition to| Duncan |the boxer and Li | detained were Eduard Carbone po’s secretary and Miguel Ferrar, 3 sparring partner. | urdes woman those | Heart Tester Helps in Liquor Hunt among Luggage With the aid of a stethoscope, used by physicians to detect disorders of he human heart, the chief of police of a Minnesota city tests incoming and outgoing baggage for traces of | aSssoassnasiossses Walter Hagen, British open champion for the second | only American born player ever to win this highest golfing title, is the owner of a Chrysler Six Roadster which offers Hoylake, and the that time that a handy compartment to carry golf bags. This photograph was snapped at Oakland Hills, Be bi i can open championship for 1924 was decided. Hagens purchased tletears troit, where the Ameri- Tt was at THE DUNCANS IN COURT presented with gold pieces) ¥ born 70 years ago| Vivi sto! fol he Duncan Sisters. » in court in Ev. ih Cicero, (II) police, traffic i were all fined’ $1 apd costs their cxse to Evanston on lare the Cicero policemen, «specially Charles Widlock, shown in inset also will have their court Ps Uga day in What the World Is Doing As Seen. by Popular Mechanics Magazine Speed of Great City Told by Startling Figures Statistics for the city of New York show that an immigrant arrives at that port every thirty seconds and an average of one arrest is made each two minutes. A child is born every five minutes and a funeral occurs every seven. Every twelve minutes a mar- riage is performed and a divorce is granted for each six hours of the day. New businesses are started at the rate of one every forty minutes and a fail- ure tukes place eyery five hours. A ship leaves theftarbor every forty- five minutes and someone is killed by accident every fifty-five minutes. The crime records of the metropolis are startling in that they show that every ven hours there is an attempt to tdke some person’s life, a suicide is committed each ten hours, and a murder occurs every twelve hours. see What Horse Can Pull Shown gurgles that might reveal the presence of contraband liquors. With the re- ceiving tubes adjusted to his ears and the sensitive diaphragm of the in- strument placed on the suspicious suitease or bag, the official, by shak- ing the article, can detect quickly any sounds that might warrant a s| further investigation. * e| Over Hundred Million Living in Electric-Lighted Homes Electric lights are now -used in the ‘homes of approximately 111,0C9,000 by Tests in England Tests made recently in England proved that.a pair of horses, each weighing 1,600 pounds, could haul a load 550 pounds greater than them- selves, On a metal track, one of these animals, it has been shown, can draw one and two-thirds times as much as on a good asphalt surface, five times as much as on cobblestone paving and twenty times the load it can pull on an ordinary mud road. For the usual type of farm horse, a eart carrying a eight of 1,500 pounds is considered to be a fair task. While pullfng Jight persons, nearly six and one-half per| vehicles and under saddle, records in- cent of the world’s population, accord-| dicate that horses are equal to great ing to a recent survey. In the United] feats of strength and endurance. A States, 39,000.000 persons enjoy the|twenty-year-old beast hitched to a benefits of electric service in their homes, this country leading all others f} in the amount of electric power used each year. Japan is second, with 23,- 000,000 living in electrically lighted homes and Germany is third with 8,810,000. Seventy-five per cent of all people in New York have electric lighta. i light cart is known to have traveled a hundred miles: in Jess than thirteen and a half houre and was in excellent condition at the end of its journey. ‘ * 8-8 @Well-seasoned wood serves excel- lently for radio panels, in the absence of more suitable material, if thor- oughly dried, ‘ i jolation, still is bandaged and one eye is discolored. an (left) and Rosetta and their) n, Il, Rosetta’s nose, broken in a lowing her brother's arrest for 2 Thi i for disorderly condugt. They change of venue. Indications now for the Duncans have preferred | inst th ne Saving Gas at Home All fuel experts know that a fire several feet below the boiler shell will give much better results than a fire close under the shell. This fact in- duced a home owner to try out the idea of the heat intensifier on a gas stove, as shown in the illustration. It consists of a strip of ordinary black | stovepipe iron, about 3 in. wide and a couple of inches longer than three times the diameter of the hole in the | grate, which will be about 20 in. inj most cases. The ends are fastened together with rivets or small stove bolts and several notches are cut in one edge. This ring is placed over the gas-bumer holes, with thé notched side up, and the cooking vessel is placed on top of the ring. A lighted match held near any one of the notches will light the gas. when the tap is opened. The use‘of such a ring concentrates the heat under the vessel and consequently reduces the consumption of gas. eee GA can of-lye dissolved in a bucket j showing the remarkable features of ‘BUTLER. AND | COOLIDGE TO TALK PLANS Major Details of Republican Campaign Are Expected To Be Settled Washington, July 21. ils of the Republican national mpaign and serious phases of the party's contest in nearby s were up for consideration at a ser- jes of conferences beginning ‘here today, with the arrival of Williar ler, new chairman of the an national committee. The primary purpose of Mr. Butler's trip was to discuss cam- paign plans with President Cool- idge. Among the subjects ‘before them were the acceptance address ut Mr. Coolidge at the notjfication ceremonies here August 14, the part to be played by the nomine for President and Vice-President in the umypaign, ‘particularly the number of addresses which Mr. Coolidge shall make and the cre: tion of an advisory campaign com- mittee. CHRYSLERHERE DEMONSTRATED New Car Handled by Corwin Creates Interest The new Chrysler Six has arrived in Bismarck, The Corwin Motor Company, who distribute the line over a large territory, have kept three men busy all the past week this wonder car to interested Bis- ck customers, When asked today by a represen- tative of The Tribune as to why there was such widespread interest! in the Chrysler, Mr. Corwin said, “The Chrysler is simply the result; of the master mind of Walter Chrys- ler, working in conjunction with un- limited money for experimental work, and assisted by the foremost automotive engineers of America! and Europe. Close to four years were spent developing the car. Three different automobiles were brought out and discarded before Mr. Chrys- ler satisfied. The first of these sold to another company and is today a most successful car. The Chrysler is a small, high spead, per- fectly balanced motor running on seven crankshaft bearings. ~Both| oil and air are filtered practically doing away with abrasive wear.) Hydraulic four wheel brakes, Gab- riel Snubbers, vanadium springs parallel with the wheels, and a low center of gravity are a few reasons, for the wonderful riding and handl- ing qualiti Major dé- lowing an automobile accident Sunday night, attending ph§siciang sald today. PRISONER TS ENTERTAINER Guest of Lions Club at Fargo By Courtesy of Sheriff Fargo, July 21.—From a prisoner in Cass county jail to guest of hon- or at the weekly luncheon of the Lions Olub ‘today comprised the program of Litberato Primiano, expert manipglator of accordian keys, who is* being held in the county jail herg for illegally enter- MONDAY, JULY 21, 19 24 ing the United States. So profici- ent was Primiano on his accordian that members of the Lions club in- vited him for luncheon, which re- quest was graciously granted by Sheriff Fred Kramer this noon. CHILDREN CRY FOR “CASTORIAS A Harmless Substitute for Casfor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups — No Narcotics! Mother! Fletcher's Castoria has been in use for over 80 years to relieve, babies and children of Con- stipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels,)aide the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep without opiates. The genuine bears signature of THEN CAME THE WHITE EAGLE- Lilting music . . . gossamer gowns . . . the clink of wine glasses . . . and then a hush— “She gripped my arm and pointed to a tall, white-haired man on the other side of the floor. “His nose was a great curved beak. “‘the White Eagle, monsieur—!’” The White Eagle —master of crooks— arch foe of society! At last a match for the wit and cunning of John Ainsley! “JOHN AINSLEY, MASTER THIEF” end pe ARTHUR SOMERS ROCHE _ STARTS JULY 22 IN THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. The Corwin Motor Company want verybody to take a ride in the Chrysler and experience the thrill’ of a motor that will run better than 70 miles an hour on high, or 40 miles an hour on intermediate, ab- solutely without vibration. Shipments of all closed models, are expected to arrive during the next two weeks, after which a spec-' ial Chrysler show, will be staged at the Corwin Motor Company by rep- resentatives from the factory. ALMOST MONTH SINCE FIREMEN WERE CALLED irre Bismarck is just now enjoying a good reputation from the stand- point of fire prevention. It has been almost a month since there was a fire in the city. The fire department today reported the} last fire call was cn June 26, An absence of bad fires through- out the months of the year ha: given the city a start toward an enviable record in the preservation of property by prevention of fire. JACK DEMPSEY’S . ARM INJURED Los Angeles, July 21.— Jack Dempsey’s famous right arm, the ene that contributed so heavily to his world heavyweight pugilistic crown, ig out_of commission fol- WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers _ Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in harge. Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887 PERRY. UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer in: Charge. ay Phone 100 of boiling water will cleay drain pipee of grease abd ‘other organic matter. Night Phones 100 or 484R. ‘ “AGGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING IS VITALLY NECESSARY TODAY T0 | MEET COMPETITION” Marshall Field & Co. That’s a good hunch to follow right now, Mr. Merchant. ADVERTISE! — and advertise where you are sure to reach the largest number of buyers, where your message will bring the quickest and surest response— ADVERTISE IN THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The one paper that for 50 years has carried the world’s news to Slope homes and covers the rich agricultural ‘district of North Dakota. Bee gy By wa wa Swe Si {wa we Won WW _KLEIN’S TOGGERY |