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PAGE TWO SHOWS HEAVY GLUTEN RUN Gluten Content of Wheat Will Show Higher Percentage for 1925 al will than the North Dakota Ag: 1 Mr. Mangels base results of 1 peen yvathered 18 countie tate Tests run from the a gluten conte The 300 snowed an average of Gluten will be r than at wa or 1924, but not as high a when @ percentage of 12.29 was se cured, Mr. Mangels predicts T River valle etion or a trifle t year “No one could better bs ever tell me Mangels find anything bad Although wheat yield about You "she hat low in some oki. the which generally shriveled kernels, this condition not true this season, as t d showed a test bushel ul WINNIE RED MASON Hit THE HOUSEMAID'S UNIFORM WORE IN A PHIVA ANITARIUM IN KANSAS CITY, results so far a as the number ifred Mason Huck, former the - from, for th Ss comparatively congresswoman and the first | the to me through fi while the survey is but, prelimi woman to preside over the house — | mailed the — pac aus yet it is indicative of the tenden-| af representatives, got herself look for work, J cy of gluten content and test tu to another weight.” crim ed in restaurant Adams county shows a high test answers to the — ques- | Back ‘to Stat weight and gluten content. Six) tions-~ back. to samples sent in by the Ad coun Are our prisons huma: est within its ty agent netted 13.7 per cent gluten Can 1, crushed by her fel- and a weight of 60.2 pounds. Five) low E i * one of the samples from Renville county mad ciety? | tations in Aint test weight of 59.9 und a glute Vhis is the ty-fifth story, | counsel with the d percentage of written for The Tribune, asking for the name. of The preliminary survey in the | eypensive: bi counties from which sainples have BY WINNIFRED MASON HUCK Mrs. Oh been received show the following re Former Repr to Congress| aid bureau sults: with a pleasian County No Test Content called th Adams 6 i one and, f Barnes 4 mn for Benson ap Burleigh 1 up on a Cass 14 ust mmons 2 Forks 12 3 9 t up th a i dloure 6 te here a McKenzie 1 iv 2 Morton 3 Bright and a Renville 5 my. way Richland ...... 8 Employment ofice, to Stutsman 8 Welsh 3 18 wrk, Williams 14 that ‘thought 1 cent void the sub. ea ey = —— | ctore to spe Fernald) with } NEWS BRIEF ee cae “_ = te Never in F older than her Fargo d , little spree than ent years in ability 1 fina It Steiner, me State's Attorney) ! omplaints were. brother | m Azadian, who disappeared with $700 Wednes Beale lovely Minnesota state Elks association in convention here, with Owatonna see- | ond, and Duluth first in the band contest. Farmington, Minn. injured when the which they were railroad depot at Five men were! scaffolding on | working at the! Rose Creek col-| lapsed. | ‘argo, N Nels Mortinson_ of Luverne, N. D., killed and Her-| man Myers of St. Paul was serious- ly injured, when their automobile! collided with a Great 1 Northern | freight train at Hillsboro. i | MANDAN NEWS | Several farmers on the Missouri! slope have suffered —considerabl loss of grain due to fire. er yesterday a large field was} threatened, but the flames were checked with the aid of neighbors. At Steele a fire started by a cigar, thrown by a passing motorist de-| stroyed 40 acres of shocked rye. Near Mott a farmer Jost 130 acres of | shocked wheat. | _,The engagement of Miss Helen| . Stabler to Frederick Tavis, the wed- | ding to take place in September at| Los Angeles, Calif., was made at_a/ dinner given by Mr. and Mrs, W. H.| Stabler Thursday evening. —_—— | THREATEN TO STRIKE | Yokohoma—Taxi drivers of the! Utility Taxi Company in Inarchio threaten a general strike because | patrons do not tip as lavishly as they | believed they would when they enter- | ed into an agreement on wages W the company. At Flash. | Piies Can Be Cured’ Without Surgery | } An instructive book has heen pub-| lished by Dr. McCleary, the nated rectal specialist of Excelsior prings, Mo. This book tells how sufferers from Piles can be quickly and. easily cured without the use of knife, scissors, “hot” iron, electri- city or any other cutting or burning methods, without confinement to hed » &9d@ no hospital bills to pay. The taethod has been a success for wenty-six years afd in more than nine thousand cases. The book is sent postpaid free to persons af- flicted with piles or other rectal troubles who clip this item and mail itiwith name and address.to Dr. Mc- Clearv, D-542 St. Louis Ave., Excel: sior Springs, Mo.—Adv. ‘ was kept entombed in this cage by ler parents, Seanez, who declared their chiid had been demented since ‘birth. ing her locked up, they said, was the only way in which they how to cope with the situation Fate had forced on them, When found the girl in the case she was nude. The girl, who it wa; showed signs of having had good care, was removed to the psycho) hospital. The mother is shown at the door of the cage. held under guard and no picture could be taken of her. pnteoe opoasauence asIA 2 the ved the usual questions. of the dead man. 1, One of the clerks isfied. ‘Then I ex-| fp and Mrs. Melvin J. Lein were Woonsocket, $. D.—Gasoline war! P?* bat athy But before you place me} cailers in Bismarck on Monday. Menuche retail. of gasoline down to1 » the matron hould tell you T have sade \ 17 cents gallon. ee ee i id, with], Mrs. Hurbie Gunderson who has; ismarck--Extension planting. of Rese LOMO 4 ug been spending the summer in the: Burbank wheat in North Dakota next | | rte. expecially: te Hieber iat ty Some Twin Cities arrived here Thursday year forecast as result of high yields, grernot remembered aU at ima Uy | Capuen cna cantq| for a visit with friends and relutives. of that variety. jaoune friend on ine oes elite noes etme ae panic New Ulm, Minn — -| Please deo: nol veay ape evar, fella about! Mr. Carl Lein and family of Bald- See ctte ane a I smiled, as 1 thought of some of| Win, spent Saturday night and Sun- 0 some of the politicians of Chicago 7 Pemeraaly Bee. og iy. Ac kact sae i ianstrous proportions | would like to say of m This community was quite well rep-; pumestonn, N. DOA hard ani Manoa id it is not necessary,” she con-| resented at the dance in Wing, Fri- BEIM ot tee Ccetate tation | ey Wrote me dater that tinued, “to tell anyone else you have | day evening. vg arp leer Ne ven then: out in the dining been in jail ‘fe AEH Only 11 planes were on the! oom the mail was distributed, "18" Bitter Contact Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Barkman and| Bates colic an itesk -Nalé rht before Baster continually meeting this} Dorothy, spent Wednesday evening CDSEATEAN EH Se ae er have told them where! warn from women who knew] st the Henry Olson home. nesota, committed suicide by’ shoot- ; : ames 2 The ice cream social and fancy i se e. | ven CUT Perey D k sale held in the basement of = St. Pa lke Q r Ore isa weraerd, "MinnSt, Paul tke Girl Found Nude in Cage; Held 23 Years | yore sae eg ee eee vanine, 4 For £3 years beautiful Sosefa Seanez, Mex‘can girl, of Los Angeles, Maria and Heginio Sosefa is ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUN trom bitter contact with the world [that it would not receive my story in the spirit in which they received it. Miss Fernald, I was established by & o'clock that evening as a general house worker in 4 private suni-| tarium. j The nurse in charge took room on the third floor. rooms for three Mrs. A, in Room A, was an ex-;1 !uwemely nervous woman, who stayed | v in bed all the time, except for taking! | 4 snort walk in the afternoon, | Miss B was a well educated re- jfined old woman, I school for 50. ye had run down. She spent her days lying in bed tting in her chair. | i Only Exercise and whose mind Her only exercise wus to express | d some of her opinions at the top of, |her loud and hysterical voice. | Mrs. © was another old woman, | a ment! without the refine: ment that characterized Miss B. called Miss B, as ¢ taking me into, she heard the nur ro gn, “TM be Tight in to read it to you." | a dont | and j Went into her room, I heard the nurse say, “The letter) | is from San Francisco,” are whether I die or not!” i i | nd it is dated May 22.” “Oh my God, my God! yelled Miss Arnold Rypp is busy getting his | | "As a result of this interview with’ threshing —unt son s work. to thresh next wee ing Besides ; Richard Borner home. Miss Jul i struck by lightning during. Tue night's storm and a all the wihdows torn out and thrown for several hundred feet. storm was the most se visited us this season. Mr [ville, “AN” right,” answered the nurse, Munt., P short trip to Fargo and the eastern who had taught] part of the leave soon on a “motor trip to the Twin Cities. ready for the He plans on starting out sea- Watkins were callers at the lay eve Johnson, assi ster, has returned f tion spent with Minot friends. nt post- at Freeman has returned from 2 he — Presbyterian church lot of damage The steeple was demolished, ere that hae MENOKEN Hattie Dunning of Hedges- iting Mrs H. Klipstein. “l want you to come now,” said! —— itient, getting louder. ‘My let-| My. and Mrs. L. J. Agnew and sare important. You just go in/three children left on No. 4 from dd talk to everybody but met You Bismarck on their to St. Paul, ay they will visit her sicter, From kept that up until the nurse there they are going to New York featy They will be gone two weeks. Miss Edna Dralle spent the week from here Saturd | ‘The Worst News with her sister, Mrs. Faye Ebling | “Ont Oht” said Miss B, as though} Te eran ? she feared the worst. possible news.|, 4 carload of hogs were shipped »e MeClusky is now threshing his as though she had heard thel Joe t possible news. wheat. - ng ae oon ee AWE ets pte | Ri. Abelene returned from a visit . | eh » door? I cannot stand that{ itt his parents at Anamoose, N. D. SHE . His wife and children we Minot | to visit Mr. Abelene’s sister, before iets ag returning home. y sent Aunt you dare. call me ‘Mra. Tea he: “Dont ye re call: irs.t"] Mr. Elmquist is now relieving L. J. 4 eat note Mrs. aynew from his work at the depot went 1 ape and everybody knows| while he is on his v: cation. Mrs. Otto Ayres spent Tuesd: Interruptions iting her sister, Mrs, Ande: | And then the nurse cooed an apolo-| Bicmarck. sta | gy and read the letter without more ete: bevu-) than eight or ten interruptions. WILD ROSE finest |, I" the kitchen, the trays were) Bill Adanis took his threshing prepared. ss Sprague,” said the doctor's wife supervising the work, “please take this tray to Miss C’s room.” “So you're the new maid, are you?” the old woman asked. me, as I en- tered with her tray. -| “Ves,” I replied, putting some of Yithe nurse's coo into my voice, for I saw Miss C was getting excited. being | “Well, you won’t be here long,” she said. “It's a terrible place.” (Cop right, 1925, NEA Service, Ine.) ie through here from Braddock to Mot- fit Saturday. A M children vi itz in the Bismare M children, good sized crowd of young folks attended the dance at Pursian Lake Friday evening. r. and Mrs. John Peterson and ed their oldest son, Lor- hospital Sunday. r. and Mrs. W. H. Brownawell and Homer and Helen and M = Ada spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Larson near Glencoe. : News of Our . Mr. and Mrs Gosney and { Neighbors children. were gather 1 fruit bright along the bank of the Big Muddy to the last Sunday. which LEIN Young People’s Society was held at the M. A. Lein home on August A large crowd was present. The next meeting will be held ‘at the Granville Selland home, August. 23. iH visiting his wife’s par elton. Jack Voll and Mik lewett Nelson spen: Glavis unloaded ee a new 45 horse power engine at whom! ‘The following families enjoyed aj Braddock Saturday. eal pienic dinner at the “Big Rocks” west " app of Wing. Sunday: Mr. and Mrs.{_ A severe hail storm passed just ily did] Henry Arneson and family, Mr. and|*uth of here Friday evening and did Mrs. Seymour Arneson und family,|Considerable | damage, demolishing Mr and Mrs, Elmer Arneson, Mr.{e#tdens, breaking nine’ window panes and Mrs. Dallas Barkman and Doro- thy. things”| day’ at the B. N. Lein home. was well attended and Ladies Aid a nice little money. netted the! sum of Selma Rise spent Sunday with her friend, Marie Ingram, who is staying, {at the’ Fred Josephson home. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Potter of Bis-j marck spent Wednesday night ut the | Henry Olson home. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Arneson and; Mrs. Anderson were business callers in the capital city, Monday . Robert Sharp, Sr, has returned to. the Dallas Barkman home after spending a week in Bismarck, Mr. and Mxs. Martin Olson and! Alice, spent ,Sunday at the Dallas Barkinan home. BALDWIN Keever of Northfield, Minn., was visiting among oldtime | friends and relatives in this district the past week. Earl is the son of; Mr. and Mrs, M. L. Keever, former residents of near Arnold, North Da- kota, Before coming hete Earl vis- ited at the Fred Stone home near Rockwood, Wis, The Stone family formerly resided on a farm a few miles nerth of Bismarck. Miss Alma Strandemo suffered a broken arm last week while water- ing a horse on her father’s farm, The horse reared, throwing Miss Strand- emo heavily to the ground and caus- ing the accident. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Rupp, accom- panied by Mrs. Albin Nordstrom, motored to Mandan the fore part of the week on busines: Mrs. Christ Bersch; Sr., of Bis- marek is spending some time here, visiting with her daughter, Mrs. John Rinehart. Me Harry Weindlebaum, Grov- er Hastings and Frank Drummond of Northern Wisconsin spent some time | here the fore part of the week. They have, been helping with the harvest around Fargo and report good crops in that district. Mr. Theodore Sheldon of Bismarck was transacting business in town the! fore part of the week, John Rinehart, who is employed on @ farm south of Mandan, spent the Keep- week-end with his family. knew police is said pathic Andrew Berch and family of near Arnold visited with Mr. Berch’s sis- ter, Mrs. John Rinehart, Sunday. They also called at the Jake Spitzer farm. Mr. Berch and family will erichedee aia | Delco-Light is more than just a “lighting plant.” It provides you with electric power, depend- able and economical, for running the machinery ordinarily turned by hand. Saves hours of time every day. FOR RELIABLE INSURANCE At the present prices of grain you can not afford to be without insurance in shocks, The cost is small when compared with the risk. on grain stacks or bins. City Insurance Agency S. 0. LeBarron, Mgr. 7 and nest {and Mike Giovais and Jack Voll are threshing at their several farms this! week, | weekly trading short} Monday. | Several of our young people went to Braddock Thurs the movies “Tu the La and daughte | Mr Bis fire in the north p: ship just missing the house, but burning up four hay S. ns of Butte, ; ba her bed again. made a professional call Wednesday Jadies of the Woodmen's Cite! nesday afternoon. here have pure namely O. B. jtrip to Hazelton the Is pectin ; SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1925 1 | How jto Bis: ing some poultry on the Er. Reaman of Hazelton was out ville farm. y and repaired the telephone his wi d Brownawell took ck Thursday for tr Bismarck hospital, Henr in 8. B. Gooding and Ernest Saville | Some of the farmers here do their! at Braddock on Pri-! j day evening and the free vutdvor RB 9 ry ergesons H. A. Carli 4 son, Dwight, £ hauled two loads of corn to Motfit Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Brownawell do My nd Brown motored to | on busin 1 Howard arck Tue: Ina garment is a small thing to look for, but a big thing to find. It means your absolute uaiantee always. Cigarettes started another prairie! tof the town north school ks of | 1 old | home- for .L. S wson, und FS yon the old Tom Watkin id. Mrs. Ernest Saville is confined to Dr. Baer of Braddéci: | Our Fall Suits and Overcoats are a beautiful assortment to select from— $20 $25 $30 $35 and up Mrs. John Peterson entertained the A number The train set a prairie fire south west part of this township ‘Thurs but prom tion of the men all around in sight of the smoke soon : had it under control W. H. Brownawell made a busine: er eson on e ie tof the we QUALITY — STYLE — SERVICK Expert Work in Electric and Acetylene i Welding | TIRE VULCANIZING THAT WEARS When you have tubes or tires vuleanized see that they are repaired in a lasting manner. No Job Too Large or ‘Too Small No need waiting for We see to this if you allow us to tuke care of your new parts as we are Gxe-troubles: able to weld them We Also Sel! Tires That Make Permanent Custcmers, EVERREADY TIRE VULCANIZERS Dealers AJAX TIRES good as new. BISMARCK WELDING WORKS 208 So. 10th St. Phone Enjoy the Best Time of the Year Now come the most glorious days of .all—late August, September and geldca October! Days meant to be lived cut-of-doors—wheu the roadsides are ablaze with flowers, and the woodlands 2 rict cf color. Take a Ford Car and sirike out from the crowded high- ways. Explore the side-trails that lead to the best fishing, the loveliest spots of natural beauty. There is no going too hard for your Ford; nothing at which its willing power will balk. And its control is so simple, so easy that you can venture where you will! on unknown dirt roads, with the same confidence with which you set cut on the paved highway. The best vacaiton daye cf all stil! ahead, the weather is less changeat'e now and roads are in better condition. Get a Ford Car and zevel in the finest time of the year, rh, Runabout - - $260 ‘Tudor Seden -. $580 Touring Car - 290 Fuyvdor Sedan - 660 Cn open core Cermuiniatic res cad starter are $25 extra, Full size bat mes $5 e:tra prices f.0. L. Detroit Sy : = “fs 2 i HR. a . ees ( <i SS EA A CRE AS FE STANCES SRTOEEOS Fa se tell me how t can secure a rd Caron €asy payments: Coupe Nazae. Addre. CO) faa Na ah I ea SASS Fe) sup “ANY AUTHORIZED Epa eunen 82 FORD DEALER OR THIS COUPON om L i: Soret Noter Composng > AHS Getroit if: ~~