The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 22, 1925, Page 2

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= PAGE TWO _. N.D. FARMERS Bs: # ARE URGED T0 GROW FRUIT | Great Plains Station Opens, Campaign to “Sell” Grow- ers on Fruit Culture A campaign to “sell” North Dakota | on fruit culture and farm} s a home-builder will be the G t Plains station partment of Agricul nnounced today by J tor, ble of the north large numbers of temporary settlers who will return east at the earliest sign of discour ag t" Stephens declared. “tt the aim of this department to build up home life by making) home sur roundings more attractive, and giv the farmer something. more to for than the stakes of the A homestead well sit belt. of shade trees with ample rden and successful orchard will omplish far-reaching results in ring rmers drawn into t s by this year's big crop, Steph ens believes. | y North have a fruit supply supply ordir ds of the hous hold table tor entire year if he will devote part of his spa to caring for a small-s: conclusions arrived at experimentation at the ( tation of the U.S. Depart Agricultur s Plums, currents, cherries” have _ bee grown on the Mandan having been ulture, fruit to whe “Whereas, wae, Agus held qn and fer the Bae a sou. mp men mont im S + Therefore, wt slalalos Bousatean aoacin Presents voles me voli of Ue ed un pms Bn Dakota mer can} lurge enough to crabapples, suc expe pted to My het iment dry he cultured on lot has been plums, e consistently resisted kill- ing temperatures and arid mid-sum- | mer weather. A total of 100 plum| trees more than five years old are standing on th ion’s orchard ex- periment tract “Compass, IFRED RAME Winnifred Mason Huck, fort \to preside over the house of re a hybrid between a! Prison. cherry and’a plum, has proved. the | most durable and at the same time the most prolific variety of fruit on the Mandan farm, “Terry” and “Wolf” plums have regis plums “Red Wing, anawers to the questions: Are our prisons human This is the fift (1) | for the (3) a i By Winnifred Mason Huck ely cultivated] Former Rey ing! ye th story: wri ‘ribune. can be orth Dakota will not under northwest climatie conditions, ac cording to findings at the exp. eet station, Gooseberries and currants thrive on ary-land locations and do not r quire more than occasional are. Nuts, including black walnut, butter- nd hazelnut, will survive ex- nes of North Dakota climate. A shelter-belt extending in at least two directions and preferubly thre north, south, st—is indisper sa successful fruit orchard in No yricultural tion finds, may consist of box eld-{ sh, and poplar, which! fitted for’ rgreens protection appl from Mlinois. sat in most on I used to wonder, as 1 | just what I would enjoy first day of freedom. More than once 1 food would be essing. The most person, placed on prison d weeks, will develop an ‘interest in food. All the woni ,jthe same inte | snatches o lused to ¢ HT the lock “And garcon,” k m be gobs of m said one yelled Jane Ri felt that.» hig. min t fo bnor | FY Mary ville t. f conver over the at night ri me ire ers, have prove northwest stand out against. winds Within the orcharé tiv: “Weeds and grasses should not be allowed to grow in a fruit garden wt any ti of th r,”" a depart- ment bulletin states. “Cultivation should start in early spring and be frequent enough to destroy weeds! before they make any considerable growth.” Fruit trees must be protecte sun-seald, which, if not pre will kill an entire orchard during one winter, according to departme tal findin will prot ming is reason of the ¢ ay, trom room ut got your edu ing like that in this place!” Ghastly Tales The girls lowered their voice: | knew they were telling — 1 tales of the ext had found in dishes served at prison. Each speaker could yo better than the one That night I dreamed of th Feat from midnight till dawn, Then there were times wher | wanted a little good music mos all, or the sight of Overhunging branches: laces, jewels. ct the trunk. Under-trim- @ not recommended for this hardy eto be things that delight my sou the shop windows, In the midst of one of these dreams, I was told to report at office of M T hated Mis | i | i | PRIVATE CAPITAL SOUGHT TO AID SOVIET INDUSTRIES ; . Moscow--VP)_-Probleme of inter-|4ay before, she had refused to nal trade are now engaging the| me 10 cents’ worth of crochet thr closest attention of the Soviet gov-)And she gave no explanation fo ernment. The recent conference of |! had the money to pay for it. the Communist Part d the Fed-| As I approached her offic eral Congress of Soviets passed a|dered if she was going number of reforms to facilitate pri-|“Madam, we know who you vate trade and to attract private ¢; is no place for former ital to general trade and industry.|women. Get your things and The government has found, out!” many years of war upon ‘private trade, that private capital in Russia does not exceed 5,000,000 rubles. The trade turnover hardly reaches 2,-( 000,000,000 rubles a year Moscow, which is considered the biggest trade center in the Soviet Federation, made a trade turnover last year of 1,723,000,000 rubles. The | bulk’ of this ‘sum falls upon state] und cooperative trade. 93 per cent ‘of the Moscow industries are in the hands of the state and only seven per cent is in the hands of cooper- ative and private concerns. Private manufacturers in Moscow employ only about 10,000 workmen, which is only 1.3 per cent of the total number of workers engaged in Moscow in- dustry. to to a little table on which was a p of glass, smeared with ink. ized that this was the fing paraphernalia, and concent! attemp' most prisoners look ch They asked a few questions my history. Tp ted t upon a paper. My heart was beating terrifi Description Then a description of me, inclu everything from the color of my to the size of my vaccination was recorded. After that I was dismissed, the words, “Report at once to | Lourey.” UCK, PAR + val mm esos sal a, : Bo your of oer Pont One Yew ‘herons, She etiam sf sau bo Hale, Sdde horely yoont fe congresswoman and the first. woman |sentatives, got herself sentenced to | iItless of any crime, she sought | Can a girl, crushed by her fellow | tered heavy | men, regain her place in society? presentative to Congress | cited t with | wneous matter they! 1 I won- congre: But it was not that. They took me/{ I re to look as frightened Then my fingers were | oiled, dipped in the ink and pres THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1925 DONED, FACES WORLD WITH $5 BETWEEN HER AND HUNGER is re a ni me, reting We of _-- toon of the, Covert of Common wally Spm ay0 aialie seat Nene Wianitoed arnt, wus arninted of anal nentonend BBs tori of. _ sere ema Se ee a aol ‘ cathonly: vaste un the Severn hy the Comshiluline FA eeetenenee ane ‘nn. PUTO aa do hy these pemonl sonidos the sonlonce.. | 1 owl | Testtmuny Mheret,. Whoer Arrunlo-ahorihed ny! cmcssrsn retud snared the Creal Meal of te Stato of Clee? Meh bewit ut | chaedny thes 9% _haay of pores wn De yur hoarLe Mawes acct vu cee Facwutovdd wii ems tSay | will support Pepper. jever, in a pinch, but Pinchot. THE 2 OF PARDON F HER ELEC OM GOV 1ON TO COD I found her in the corridor, which YOR GR DONAHEY WHICH HANGS, | rooms, but if I was “not afraid to/ rrted for the noon hour. She sleep in a room with seven strange | pre- | led me ty my hall and said, “Get; women,” 1 might have a bed in the | all your things ready as quickly as, dormitor: | you ean.” Afraid of strange people! After But my recent experiences, 1 felt that I roer my lunch on a, Should never fear anything again. tray. And my traveling bag and my! I took the bed in the dormitory own clothes were lying on the bed. f£ and paid 75 cents for it. I left my (was going out! bag there for the day. Aren't you soi Two little old women had the one Hluneh, Elizabeth?” double bed. rey After supper, 1 told he -j dressing to go ‘mer Lourey led me to her | itten ie asked t your ss Lou- M when they were out, one of them [missed a pair of gloves. They jsearched under the pillows, under tell you something} the bed, in all their pockets, idle naforeslaro, 1 went downstairs with a cold “You have been mighty fine tu me! feeling around my heart. Suppose }and to the oth But the best. they sh arch my bag and find | thing about you is that never onee|my Ma » “diploma!” | did you patronize us. You know you! Downstairs I inquired for Mrs. ure better than we, but you had the Fraser, the house secretary. I was ce und kindliness to conceal the|told I might see her in the morning. | Lwas relieved at the delay. Thad She looked puz d, for I was using made up my mind to tell her that I] ct English for the first time inj W4s an ex-convict, but I did not want! presence ito tell her until those gloves were n ay I found or the commotion over them nthe charge ed. id, thinking how ing: everybody Ye she hs that Twas at. ‘Then I ny clothes. "Me have to Miss Loure too much e Legan to ge! in’ i jail, | my} rood hest nded oY t tl felt: co jh it! sof th ls that | ce . a good deal wor y pa had been ‘lle. i that. 1 was] ly'to belie he had, for 1 T ad started the y myself. No Crime de Their Troubles I went up to bed. e yirls were sitting on their beds, king of their trouble “We found the glov Hy I have committed | h d girl next to me, rontinued. “The gover-| “Where?” I asked, only partially [nor knows I am innocent of the’ relieved, for the idea had struck me charge on my commitment papers that someone might have put them j and that is the reason for my pardon.|in my bag, either for a joke or to “I can tell you no more, not even herself. right nam | he girl who had that bed over the! Miss and I are friends. We, there had them in her pocke' one| write to each other often, und she! “Where is she now?” | asked, a | still addr Untit good deal more concerned over her he than over the gloves. |. “They've got her In less than an hour T was on the basement,” was the t of n going to Columbus. I knew! “Poor kid,” I thought and won- ays,! then why Miss Green had s y would do to her. the] me the trifling purchase “I was the one who suspected her,” ul in] She had known that I leaving. id the hazel-eyed gi “I can tell | It is not the refusal of a request people just by looking at them.” day | that so stin convict as the flat! “You ” said I, becoming inter- the| refusal to give any explanation of ested. “Then do me a favor and tell the act. ime, do I look dishonest?” The necessity of accepting without! imswer, 1 thought, would give a murmur any treatment that the me a clew as to whether they had powers choose to deal one is one of searched my bag and found my par- the most galling burdens of prison don. life. |. She ga There I in the train. My par- look. I don was rolled up like a diploma in, (Copyright, 19 my bag—the document that I have nee framed and hung beside certificate of my election to Cong: My pocketbook contained $3.90, all that left of a five dollar bill which had been given me according to regulations, as I left the prison. There would be no more money until I earned it. Only the first chapter of my ad- venture was finished. The next ones were to unclose the life that follows prison, the struggle to come back that every convict faces. No Friends Thad no friends in Columbus and I wondered, vaguely, as the train rumbled on, where I would sleep that night. As the conductor took my ticket, 1 felt sure he knew I was just out of jail. He spoke to me rather kindly. In Columbus I sought out the Y. W. C. A. There were no vacant At 10 0 said the te ‘no crime, locked in the ee | sell read. r it.) a long, searching ly held my breath. NE ervice, Inc.) BIG PROGRAM “TS PREPARED "FOR VETERANS Greatest Fireworks Display Ever Made in America Planned for Meet This get piece print on me bout dl ly. | ! ding H eyes with w Omaha, July 22—When 100,000 American Legionnaires come to Oma- ha next October for the American Hokey Pokey Girls Introduced To Compete with London Men London—(®)—The “hokey pokey” firl has appeared in London—hun- dreds of her. The hokey pokey ice cream man arrived three or four years ago, by leaps and bounds, andj is now a familiar sight in any’ part! ‘of London, every afternoon and eve- ning during the warm weather. One| firm alone has 1,500 men, on three- Wheeled bicycles, who sell ice cream sandwiches for a penny, and recent- jy another firm, with the same con- veyance for carrving the ice cream packs, started with young women as dispensers. The contention is made that girls naturally take more interest in their work, and are capable of mak- ing more sales because of their abil- ity to make friends more quickly and to handle the hokey pokey more dainiily than their men and _ boy. competitors INSECTS 804.) IN TOKYO ! ¥OR MUSICAL QUALITIES Tokyo, July 22—CP)—Singing in- sects are now on sale by street ven- ders along the Ginza, the gay “Main Street” of Tokyo. The principal warblers of the insect variety are crickets and longhorned grasshoppers. To the Japanese the “song” of the ericket and the grasshopper lends a peculiar charm to the summer eve- “The diminutive insects are sold in juaint bamboo cages, decorated with ribbot Prices range from fifty yen to as high as twenty-five yen each. HOT? NOT THIS WAY! | Legion National convention, they will see the greatest display of fire- {works ever staged in America. The display that was originally de- | Signed for the Coolidge presidential jinauguration celebration, augmented iand enlarged upon by the addition Jof military units, airplanes, smoke | screens, ete., will’ be shown’ at Ak- |Sar-Ben field following the military contests and horse races. Immediately after the military show, a French train, an exact re- | production of the trains the soldiers {rode in France, will come on the field and will stop at a model “French Village.” American troops will disembark and will be welcomed by the villagers with folk dances and games. Afterward the soldiers will eo to their billets. Following this a fleet of German airplanes will attack the village, dropping bombs and going through all the maneuvers of raiders. Amer- jean anti-aireraft artillery will go into action. Three thousand men will take part in this phase of the displav. As the battle progresses and the firing becomes heavier the village will be burned to the accompaniment of explosions from twenty ammun tion dumps, which will be destroyed. As the village hurns, a fleet of army airplanes will fly over and lay a dense smoke screen five miles long and a ovarter of a mile high, upon( which fifty high-power army search- lights will be concentrated, forming a spectrum and lighting up the en- tire field. It is at this point the inauguration fireworks program will be out on, buglers will unite in sounding “taps, while the piece burns. Following the fireworks the final-| ists in the drum corps, Woman’s Auxiliary drill teams and the band contests will come on the field and go through their final drills to de-/ jcide the winners in the competitions. | PINCHOT HAS BIG CAMPAIGN FIGHT AHEAD | Administration Forces will: | Oppose Governor in Race | for Senate BY CHARLES P. NEA Service Writer Washiagton--If Gifford Pinchot is ted to the United States senate r, it will be over the bodies | of olidge administration sup- | porters_in general, of couse includ- ing the body of Senator George! Wharton Pepper, whose seat Pinchot | ants to take away from him, and | jover the body of Secretary of the! Tr la usury Andrew. Mellon in particu- | Out of Pennsylv: entire timated population July 1, 19: 9,317,647, official census figures, doubtful if there’s one, regard of uge, sex, race, creed or polit whom the national administration wouldn't support for the senate in| preference to Pinchot. i Of course the administ have to make any such choi Anybod. 5, of | i ation won't | re. It how- | By NEA Ser | “Hollywood, ¢ j time Pinchot’s Republicanism, stron flavored as it is with isn’t liked, at best, by That, however, isn’t’ what 0} heavily against him with the admin- |. istration—es Secretary Mel- | #8 apt to lon, smoothly. The administration Roy Lindman, for Brookhart, Frazier, Shipstead, | feur who ¢ Wheeler, would have stood for La | 8¢ross the str Follette or Ladd, rather than | just recovering Pinchot. the jaw. The administratio It will b cially Mellon’s, feeling — against, need, h Pinchot is personal. It gnaws and| — Lindni gripes and keeps the administration | home of awake nights thinking about it. Chicas stars him. Wh When, one consider mendously big a man Secretar lon is in the present administr what weight his word car we and the things Pinchot has said bout him incidentally land- ing some ringing cracks over his head, upon the presidential dome | elf . . ..and when one considers | that Pinchot is trying to get into the senate from Mellon's own state . | and at the expense of Senator! Pepper, whom the administration likes pretty well. i When one con understands why S( by giving him a on the point of arry bh would ind | and espe-| his. how tre-| The Me He went to ion, | gained fame returned to He owned automobiles, on Lake J on speal waiters ¢ clubs and then So he m the fathe Life was prett enough money, And then life Lindman and nged. She won it, gaining their children fortune. rie’ Jers all this, one the idea of Pin-| s senatorial aspirations makes‘ administration froth so. Secretary Mellon Pinchot for governor of Penn: vania in the first place. The Repub- lican state organization fought him, but he won, { This angered the organization to begin with and Pinchot angered it worse later. Then he began m the national administration by com- plaints of federal prohibition non-| enforcement. This was injurious and Pinchot added insult to. it. President Coolidge explained that! the national administration was do- ing its best and it was up to the state governors, including Pinchot, to help some. To the statement that ; the national administration was do-| ing its best Pinchot, in effect. an-| swered with a contemptuous “Bosh”! —a way no president likes to be! talked to, Pinchot didn't = want! “So I st: Lindman, “1 tr like adventure. | “After a few that my money in Hollywood br couraged. king trouble for began kidd cars I used too “You ought t chauffer ‘That got me I left him I we. and applied for : Le: “1 didn’t h but T soon drive. So 1 wa: didn’t even concede that! the ministration “meant well.” He said Secretary Mellon didn’t want to enforce the law. Why not ?—inquired some. Where- upon Pinchot pointed to the secre tary’s distillery interests, Analyze the innuendo in this ex- planation and it becomes evident it’s the kind of thing a public man} —particularly a r and mighty one, like Mellon—is apt to put in the absolutely unforgivable class. license.” nothing but lea started driving “I learned a | ng in the fr did riding in the “The outlook different. the man vh ybe that's After Pinchot had kept his cam-| paign up for a while it came the organization's turn to score one. It denied him a place in the Pennsyl- vania delegation to the last Repub- lican national convention. It's doubtful if a state governor ever got such a jolt before—his own party convention—but it went to il- lustrate the organization's intense bitterness toward the Pennsylvania executive. Ma tangled back seat.” Now, in a recent speech at Port- land, Ore. Pinchot again charges that Secretary Mellon, “for the bet- ter part of a generation a whisky distiller and distributor,” has “r fused to carry out the duties of hi office. But this time he implies a new ac- cusation. The administration is en- gaged at present in a tremendous demonstration of force against pro- hibition law violation. If Pinchot doesn’t mean to say he doubts this demonstration’s good faith he cer- tainly expressed himself badly, and he doesn't often do that. Pinchot is a mighty efficient Kknogk-down-and-drag- out palitical fighter and not a very safe man to et against, but in the coming sena- torial struggle in Pennsylvania he assuredly is going to have a chance to extend himself. BOWMAN UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embaimer in Charge. Day Phone 100 Night Phones 100 or 484R. WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers Embalmers Funeral) Directors Licensed Exabalmer tn Charge. Then, TS he lea the ms wit home of his own. of two children. Trying to Forget fe everything that locked some rich fellow hi borrowed enough We have to please e d up when I w: bomb outrages, had been ‘ 7 7 guilty of A CRACK ON THE JAW! robberies and ,extortions, it having been shown tha of the Lisbon banks had given large sums of money men under threat of damage ya bomb, BINDER $6.50 Guaranteed 500 ft. STANDARD Freshly manufactured; free la- bor; part of our 1,000,- 000 Ib. purchase. Deliv- eries at Moorhead, Grand Forks and Valley City. Immediate Delivery. M. F. Cooper Twine Co. 3d Ave. S. & Ist St. Minneapolis one Authorized DUCO Refinishing Latest modern method. We also do automobile Top and Curtain work zs well as all kinds of Upholstering. Work Guaranteed, PAINT SHOP 8rd Floor at LAHR MOTOR SALES CO. EAGLE TAILORING & HAT WORKS Cleaning Pressing Repairing Remodeling Dyeing LADIES AND MEN CLOTHES Hats Cleaned and Reblocked 24 Hour Service on Mail Orders. We Call For and Deliver. Phone 58 FOR SALE at a Big Discount, 70 Shares of the Bowman Furniture Co, Stock. Inquire at W. E. PERRY'S Funeral Parlors 5th St. ROY LINDMAN ! Afler a Fortune Among the things Lind is the value of money. bank account that h week, and he a pigeon rs ley wher of the Chi probably will eof his fortune Lindman irn’t if., nd king) stiff wallop squa y up in the the : ns h long more or le nts on les im the dapperest et wheeled a ts of Los Any t father’s a big as hi: from eth "he last one he'll ever! explai An the | usual Hearn i bly will, F ell with thos: er the wallop on the W for = “! NEW BUILDING | APPROVED FOR MINOT NORMAL ste board of pproved of | ions for construction © addition to include a gym auditorium at the s t college at Minot, it by RB. Murphy, will Le opened August fi slature at i nds for co the Mi pis were h, Min D nied by © president of the Rush presen the new cons sion, Buildi in the f: life who chin, nt re up in tather ys Idle 1 Cornell a footbal Unive ue full of onsiderabl in hi | { The H today fi dministr: and 600 and a 1 Preven y simp he d dl. delivered the wallo his wife becam ued for divare also the custod and the bulk of etion | itu-| wn up| vt in: dr wander to foret about | life ik 1 dene yand di mnths of S701 huny FIFTY | L SOF L BOMB OUTE bon (PR) Thy vestigating. f the Lisbon because rounding up ent bomb outr w vd | ‘ok DEPORTED ul of. the clice has be- opular men itie the 1d frie meal ind. the © niost of in wn. in © be worth a lot t ein Holly wood Y he told thinking. nt | | | effort h, the tempted Ferreira de Ai bon police, who wa Only one assailant E but rigid the iden were taken o when ne Heat tion of Colonel hNS ion of Colone! daxiidniyey . head of the Li shot on a stre f the proup of t the time, ion soon the others nto custody. This pro k when the police decided use the leaders, having rest after previous out- me bolder with each suc- | ceeding one and did not take the 1YS./ trouble to hide from the police. | Colonel Amaral’s fine V-| the World war won fdr him gene jadmiration and the police of all sec shi nm arn he at ince : than I eat,” he life is entir ‘ont e bac! on ove in the b. nself. why my life got riding in th 5 tions of Lisbon joined in a coneert- ;ed move to appr nd his assailant The investigations revealed lthe terror dition to the 0 As is—it is delicious! As a Mixer— the finest you ever poured. PaLe ony ds | The hot spell doesn’t bother Miss Betty Moore, of Philadelphia. Sic hae all the pleasure of the seashore brought into her own apartment. A Wox of chocolates, an electric fan, a bathing suit and the old reliable bath tub—and Betty is prepared to withstand the hottest day. ' Day Phone 746 Night Phones 246-887 \ The climax of the display will come when a huge set piere. forty feet. high. showing an American’ bugler, is set off. One thousand «The average American family con- sumed 824 pounds of dressed meat Test year. eoeseeemenemnennnee tneiemnenteeemnameeestesianaemenaneneeateaalieetcmenianet neneaitemeaeatteeal

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