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PAGE TWO — PROPER THAT DAKOTA SHOULD HERALD TO WORLD PROGRESS IN CORN RAISING, SAYS DONNELLY of Northern Pacific Railway Company Tells of Advance Made in Growing Corn Before Large Audience at North Dakota Corn President A Historical Ss dou the bar before Upper Missour illed corn Welt the ns tl about 1 . this statem, pureha a quantity whieh m holes my their lodges, during thi of Village rot get a0 therefore thes tor nore th Perhaps, after all, ow be engaged stot North Dik rowing regio appropriate of corn development agriculture the -| n ground histori a | ty student of corn is che double purpose | a knowledge of | of corn and meth- pand at same publish to the nation the faet tthe white farmer of North Da+ a is fellow footsteps | his Indian # his reliance issour hw, helt is pushing its w rdoth for the sec~ need farming Ito be the | Itural dif- md T nye! in history. of a dan enduring under a 01 the rotation | ent of eon every farm agric crop. syste of crops a livesteck enterpri seems to be the ed program for farming in this corn raising. should” be encou d to take a larger and more important part in our agricultural ations, as no rotation is complete without an ine ter-tilled cr cultivated crop, such as | corn, and no crop seems to mesh it with’ econom livestock produc- | tion quite so well as corn. A larg: replacement of small grain with corn wi of ‘agricultural ¢ of the ing ha intensi advancing pop from east to W history in. every fiddle west, as wheat | hefere the foot p farming and af lation, in its course | st. It is important, from the standpoint o in North Dakota, that whatever possible atten n be di- rected to the necessity for in eorn acreage, but it is likewisi portant that ‘we expand the this ‘op in the st from the andpoint of our national welfare, Corn Production Greatest Industry Corn production is now the great. est’ single ndustry of the ni ny amounting, in 19 to 04,774,- | 800.00, and occupying 105,060,000 acres cf our most valuable land. The uses of this great crop are many and ried. ‘ot only does it constitute the chief food: product for animals, ~ but it likewise enters into the mane ufacture of more items of hum food than any other farm crep.. It is not only of vital importance to the agricultural i but it Is interwoven in the commer. cial and industrial fabric of the ti Such heing the case, the t population is outst ipping the ability of the corn belt proper to prodice a sufficient amount of corn for ou national needs is a matter of much concern to economists, A study of the figures on corn acreage Suggests that no further increases in acres planted te the crop or in bushels produced may be expected in: the strictly corn ‘states of the middle west. Acreage there has heen either at a standstill or reced- ing for the past five years. Iowa Was planting 9.804,000 | acres in 1899, and 10,884,000 acres in 1924, an dustry as a whole, | i increase of Slightly less than a mil- lion aeres in ‘ears, Illinois was planting 10,266,000 acres in 1899, and 9,177,000 acres in 1924, a de: “erease of over a million acres in the past 25 years; and in the states nio and, Indiana, corn acreage very gradually on the decline. “Fiirther east the increase of corn @iseases and insect pests are caus- ing ® revension in the crop, as 14 also true in the entire south, At dis becoming increasingly apparent to} Vottic al classifi i s eran pendence ine intimate and. er when 4 nizing north. | aim and the Sing fet in Ue sohut {fo that end it demanded, how ident of the sit on must look to the nh production teh popitetion incre turly two million ne more. positive. or hee advanced ory pe od ot short and its adapt. | Pakett eut in nditions tha nd feed 1 ernie mi pure Ai duced its sata ieultmyal whose dl ith the fa site sion the « northwest corn ed ime corn were an donb Vous acres] Miers whol xive helpful inf (ced with the | and when it Tom in thet Hitthe less tha he fear of | eas msneh | this: sta tion whose tH fy inillion | (a Pelieve the a Near would | it was. amons subscription Tdo. not con Jsary ‘ror me Caption « heen dictated jit tas. 1 repe | our recognition ee ives may nde able: and uppeal to the would seem it Lit yo) 1p ntare Wan sud Montan A oraintall ar mperie ren but becugise it ha i coming in net use » prodaetion vonditions. stalk this and nd than of re deve OUSHESS Of ied bility fodder stalk are may Te eter of Erewth lat will survive this climate over a study of xrown rs of already paket the rs per ly we kind of situdes ing jes so Snecesstully Commission E roIndisn farm , yo owhieh have vanes the more of this crop, we n whe orn staple age is Well minon p country, has sub- dvent of a larg Problems in depleted ly hecause utilization the crop livestock. on the farm, re- the land manure what taken trom it in the pre- the erop. No other non. oduces more digest ts per dere, thus a_con- rd is obtained with a minimum in loss of fertility. Corn is veritably th to mixed as the nd utiliz rop on of the lew tural products that the weed menace, ¢ sided with corn ner lity ree preush turns t important ¢ tie me tributed t te the wate nothem th nal has contri main expl the rail territer nerant help, is tha rates to meet those rates hi us in othe St in States the world wher uniformly prosper ses Whi inc " ab United States bas heen allo distriet the in the wi has been in ependen fewltar. te the tos taxes and oper Jas prod is inuch smaller 1, the year inte more of the gre nsisted Mture, while of the prod bituminous de"the tonn: t : th in each ca ducts of agri this ter er ro; agriculture is They agricuity lirect the this, it rsistent polic to assist thi ion of has, when th as during t ge inv two its rates it has cut in two its rates vestock: it on dairy ex xin the field velopment is to keep experie ation and med nece Iwo 4 orm at credit Is xheuld be a rienltural s the first to ar Tund req nor is i eyo alten tou of the fact t a the inte n choose, by Pon that re h proprie! norenn five hound sted to th Inters or the ate push the buted to it this the tin i post-1 not been arts of the eh ting expens ates: In the eastern district of th we been tion territory—thel kota In ax strong and t Pennsyl- f the fe of Uh has heen the prob rstern North | on, in touch But the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ne = that of any state in the’l Th But after economic theortés may mean nd fam the last 1 think of disparaging. nearly | their importance—they ucts of jeverything, nor are they ir nd an-) chief thing or the promoting. the material and North-| welfare of a state. ‘That infl other |T repeat, is found in the se con-, and character of its citizenship culture, (we find that are gion of Uh ir de- | mental po! more {on in North nnot | obtrusive wrist is} a transforryation in the-cha fits agricultur: vities, of farming the . old f that of dependenc. op of a single cereal, wets of than it fe han Ste | there has t kota, quietly he lat n evidenc and what state of sources when these lines exhibit day what come; sand) 0 sult of | going ste nee toleffect must ;| ture, and to ‘an be accom forth Dako on hay) b it proceeds has: r tule: it{ its ag- | ara which we witness h ‘orth Dakot that an agr n started y fory he gsure to those en afin it, and to those who serve them, the financial stringer y tua nak & wired. to intend, that this line of -conduet has tic motives. | nthe result ot | been an of traf ‘ that in this. showing | p United + United Obviously, to meet the great have shown in som: avoid- of 74% outhern n 48 whole it on th only schigh as n Who woul minbmizing eed thy chief influenc mo ntellig ; and long with the discus- se questions of govern- n going nd une but none the ut acter of Ww along is found in the splendid In this we have an earnest of ‘an and will | ural | and is ‘ard, of which the to stabilize agricul~ /TOH. Va rents T nd| not int nT ence | ly | and} have | | principles, upon th being legated into the background: of what has been Hing lished Ir and to. | fi fire wi 6 ye cows, SCHILDREN HINCKLEY FIRE Hinckley, Minn., hree children we: their burns in attempting to {the home of Dennis Marudas, living five miles southeast of her le ing, early today. The dead children are: ars old; |John, 14 months old. and went to len m., Mrs, Marudas investigated. ablaze, she sum- | | Between 6 and 7 a. smelled smoke and Finding the hou moned the father, He attempted to i jenter the bedrooms to |dren from their beds, blocked his entry. attempted enter the} In the case burning farm house eral times.! ys, the North ever: were but he was forced to retre: jattempt. His hands and | severely burned face nd his condition is court has cash i: id to be serious, bie’ eu an insurance 3 ; s The father was unable to enter the | acting as suc! Father Is Seriously Burned in jfarm house until the flames had sub- | the saspariy ‘ “s sided and the structure n ance on cert: Repeated Attempts to ed to the ground. The bodi by transmits children were en from the ruins | surance for Rescue Them later. jself and is t company to ORDER OF COUNTY i COURT NOT VOID Reversing a decision of the k: som county district court, the supreme court held, in the case of the armers ile v Glady. y and others, that an order of the county court setting aside to a surviving widow prope Jclaimed as a hoi is not void |because the county court has no jur- The 18,— e burned to d suffered father company save ught terms of leep- the children were Magdalene, wn, Marie, 3 years old, and |i siction to make such an order, ‘The ole sefore five acm,|€ase Was uppealed to the supreme | { fitone Leflore ini the |ourt by. the defendants | following | inten « chidre ie baetion of the Ransom county district |CTtY Insured a ing the children asleep-|oourt, ‘The action of the lower court |UPO" Which same surance company the s| held hier of a bank is also agent for an application for insur- agent for the insurance I] intents and purposes.” as appealed to the su- preme court from the district court of Sheridan county by the insurance following a dec |of the plaintif: tended that Michelson v | the insurance | when he asked insurance on buildings |situated on property which he did not The court held, however, th ‘an insurance company is bound b the knowledge of its agents as to the rest of the applicant in the prop- ew. ured and in the real property | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1925 ‘High Court Rules | .in Case Against Insurance Company Big Bargains in Millinery |at Nielsen’s Millinery. Scientific Use Gas. It’s the Fuel. For Zap coal. call 1051W. Frank Everts. To kill MOTHS At vseobues * of Matthew Michelson American National In- te supreme “where the that company and where, agent, he transmits ‘to in buildings he there- an application for in- person other than him- ion in fave The company co jolated the application DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropracter Consultation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. situated.” i} busines m the mise of corn r F ‘ore to hold for the future wo oyow facts not in but as illustra’ ur prob this exposition with a) opportune tine ting and historical nd it is ¢ sired that all concern riewltural development 1 lend their tim: port to its t depend lems, we ma: from ours, Still in an ear The § nt in th Desirable Ars ¢ methods of production and adapted Xeeptio: types: Varieties i no t mewhatt experi- i This} New political how at] have been nd aid | expeeiments factors which | h prosper- jon in’ the Womak ous industry ere this re to ma y regard possible, You you might could them. It would in- nd you will press, an op ives emph. promotion of state of in the 2 ation, ix of the stir: mnnally of such contributes: s ably te that end tant to Railroads rianes usricnltu T transportation interests thiwest can seareely be exag- We know, of course, and tion is a very trite e4 culture not only T have said fact that. the wing in the the iner 1 to its cul importance to the recurrence exhibitions as this sibly and unmista was much may b this much in sio even the most censorions 0: what the | took ine | ness Toultimately | intens arts of the) this state. mach less | were ast than ft is in| stood for the the tonnage | nor is there’n ile Sof ld the ‘s operatine in| essen ted obse At upon tnsportation indu: SUP, IS essentially ndent: but in oth: nntry this dep rd imi west the the ne moved hy he Carrie An $3.50 $4 ie a LILES LEB related to. ¢: the propounded tbe not’ be _ Bergeson’s Relat nr attenthe compla ting what Thy plems and di ch oth upon hot We have been willing to as- sist you in coping with your prob- fairly exp you in d ate of North Dakota has in shalleng vd, nal degr elligent a in th nd and econom he in rhe: ke an ing them fr might be against indiffe: the nt hecome me not expect ni inion cone wisdom or unwtisdom of much th undertaken here. confidently affirmed: the wa: might be wrung indeed uncomp! f your nt of the cour: slight Icanism of Meet. your friends at Bergeson’s. Boys’ Longi oys Longies EVERAL HUNDRED*PAIRS’ just received in all the new colors; ages 4 to 20. Crieket Sweaters for Beys > _eppeeteerm EU ttitude of ne for them; Clothing. ed ny s fr t wi her; and nt some- he atten houghrul nt’ have nkly_im- PINPOINT towards express, to ex. ning the VIVETTE tnt th BOLIVIA SUEDES ‘orth Da- ’ ee ee The Fabrics NERDLEPOINT LUSTROSA PETIT POINT ‘MONTEBELLO 1 eA REET RT MARKED difference between this sale and others. You will recognize that fact imme- diately when you see these wonderful Winter Coats. The latest fashions in Wrappy Coats, Flare Coats, Godets, Silhouettes and other styles. If you are keen on being fashionably clad and saving at the same time, by all means come. There is much here to interest and fascinate you. We have grouped our coats in the following range for your convenience: $19.50 to $22.50 values, special at $16.50 $24.50 to $29.50 values, special at $21.50 $35.00 to $39.50 values, special at $29.50 $45.00 to $49.50 values, special at $34.50 ‘$65.00 to $79.50 values, special at $49.50 $87.50 to $99.50 values, special: at $67.50 $110.00 and $115 values, special at $82.50 $139.50 to $185 values, special at $99.00 v The Furs BEAVER SQUIRREL WOLF FOX MANDEL OPOSSUM CONEY CARACUL { 4 H i ‘ \ \ { qo! ' i