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P. T — mie de ve me fo th th ac re co tie th ne in er st ci in m to tk m at re 81 COURSES T0 BEOFFERED AT Agricultural College Summer School { Indications are that there will be) a considerable increase this season} attendance at the summer school | f the North Dakota Agricultural | ers from the publict the state and former regu- tudents are expected to college shows work to be s of acade work, alf a quarter of the r Fr session, is becoming nore popular cach year as indicated marked upward trend in numbers giate standing of | er school body. Th | ©. ag to members of the staff, is noticeable in the ine ance of advanced students, and | f sought. college its n “All work given at the summer ses- | receives credit applicable toward | a college degree,” says Dean A. D.! Weeks i of the summer | “The work of ion is plann manual | domestic science will | prove of value not only to those seek- | ng certificates, but to other te: s and ‘superintendents. Th hool program of study will | also prove of interest to high school princip: summer graduates who lack professional sub- | jects that entitle their diplomas to rtification,” continues Dean Weeks. | Eighty-one courses will be available summer schoo! students at the college. The work includes courses | in agriculture, botany, chemistry, | cedueation, English, history, home manual training, mathema- rman, physical train- vomen, public dis- and zoology. ty of parks and has| de drives, while the! 2 scene of beauty during growing season. Tennis, folk | dancing and other diversions are | under the direction of the instructors | of physical training. Among the vaca-| tion attractions are the Minnesota| lakes within an hour's drive. The} state fair will be held during the latter pa of the summer school period contributes educational featu Fc. Faith Olsen at, 2:30 Tomorrow Jamesta N. D., April 20.—()— Funeral services for Miss Faith Ol- en, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. T. A. m) who was the victim of an au- to accident ismarek Sunday, will be held dnesday afternoon at the Methodist Episcopal church here. They will be conducted by . Boyd of the local Pres- yterian church. John Mooney, the driver of the fatal car, is reported to have slept about three hours last night. He is still confined to his bed but. mostly from the shock of the tragedy, hav- ing been only bruised about the face and one urm when the car turned over with its five occupants. Ward Co. Red Cross to Help Victims of Ryder Prairie Fire D., April 20,-()-—Finan- to’ the extent of $1,700 will be extended by the Ward county chapter of the American Red Cross esidents of the fire stricken area r Ryder. Chapter officials today d to expend funds not to exceed 00 in rehabilitation work in the ea. One man was killed and many thou- sands of dollars damage was done by a prairie fire in the Ryder vicinity last Thursday afternoon. State’s Attorney H. E. Johnson said today that an investigation has in- dicated that criminal negligence possibly was involved in the s of the fire. He plans to que: the near future the man who is sus- pected of having set afire a straw pile from which the flames are thought to have spread. {Federal Farm Facts , —_—_—_——_—e Thousands of dollars’ worth of damage is done annually to the apple crop by the depredations of aphis, which suck the juices out of the fruit} and foliage. This damage is most ex- tensive during the late spring and early summer, causing the apples to ‘become deformed and knotty and the leaves to become curled and shrunken. “The crop story since 1919,” states the April report of the Department of Agriculture, “has been, roughly, two years of heavy surpluses, two years of readjustment and two years of fairly stable adjustment. The in- tentions-to-plant reports give evi- dence of the general stability that once more appears to underlie the production program as a whole. The percentage of the weed seeds in feed, which may pass uninjured through the digestive tract of cattle, has tbeen determined by experiment to be 33 to 86 per cent. Of these, 27 to 58 per cent germinate. , Many ranchers use paper twine to tie fleeces, as fragments of this come out of wool casily in the scouring Other twines leave bits of ich ure, diffieult to remove, Tbe exten’ of cotton use in textile fiber industry is shown by the re- port that more than 8,000,000,000 square yards of cotton goods are manufactured and used in this coun- try severy year. From first ‘to fourteenth place in fess than 20 years is Wisconsin’s de- clining reco lumber producing state. Reforestation efforts in the state are now under way. Recent experiments by A. G. New- ‘hall, assistant plant pathologist at ‘the Ohio experiment station, indi- #ate’ that the soil in @ greenhouse which grew diseased plants har- bel he sings for mon’ of pass 6 di: succeeding crops. wee 1926, NEA Service, SUMMER TERM, Large Enrellment Expected at] vey Legionnaires to Franc: ABOVE: The Montroyal, type of ship from the Ca: ry Ry. ne e next year. ian Pacific Fleet which will con- LEFT: Full speed ahead for France! Captain H. Sibbons of the Montroyal of the Can- adian Pacific Line. RIGHT: The Montroyal in war time packed to the rails with American troops boun¢ for France. Fargo, N. D., April 20.—Veterans| of the World war from the state of North Dakota will embark for ghe 1927 convention of the American Legion in Paris from the port of Montreal on a ship of the Canadian Pacific line. This information was received today by Jack Williams,| Fargo, departmental adjutant of the| Legion for North Dakota, from. Bow-| man Elder, of Indianapolis, Ind., chairman of the Legion’s national) France Convention Travel Committee. From the same port will go a smal army of Legionnaires making up the! delegations from the states of Idaho, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan. They will enjoy the shortest actual ocean passage possible from the American shores to Europe. Following the endorsement by Pres dent Coolidge and the movement in| congress to provide ex-service em-| ployes of the government with ample vacation time in 1927 for the France: trip, plans for the great pilgrimage are maturing rapidly, Mr. Elder has stated. It stimated that 30,000) Legionnaires and Legion Auxiliary | members will take part in the migra- tion back to the scenes of the dough-| boys’ activities 10 years befo: A cordial invitation has been from France, and preparatons are made to provide comfortable housing in the French capital. To Visit Battlefields In Paris the veterans will celebrate the tenth anni ary of the entry of the United State: ito the World war They will also visit the battlefield and pay homage to their comrade dead tduried in the American cemeteries of France. But what a difference now there will Stutsman County Pioneer Is Dead April 20- (#) jillifillan, 69, a pi neer of this county, died last evening at a local hosptial where she has been a patient since March 1 pneu- monia. She has made her home with her nephew, F. L. Robertson, here the past year Burial will be made at Brinsmade where her husband, Alex Gillifillan, died Februar: Besides Mr. Robertson she ved by. three nieces, Mrs. ettenberg, James- town, and Mrs. William R. Williams and Mrs. . Williams of Cleveland, and a sister, Miss Belle Hastings of Santa Monica, Calif. Short fun services will be held here Wednesda and the body taken to Brinsmade. eo RES I eS aaa | FLASHES OF LIPE | | a area a as o Rome — Commander De Pinedo, noted aviator, is building for Musso- lini an aerial yacht so that he can have complete comfort without the trouble of unpacking in hote It will have a sleeping cabin and kitchen, Philadelphia--Labert T. Gardner, who when a boy organist prodigy at the centennial exposition in 1876 fell It won't be like this in 1927. be, the great migration in 1927 and the crossing of the A. E. F. in 1917. There will be no packed transports, no e ing of slum from mess kits, no living in momentary expectation of attacks from German submarines. Instead. in September, 1927, a gaily decorated fleet of liners *will sail down the picturesque St. Lawrence, between wooded, palisaded shores, past the battlemented heights of Old Quebec, to the summer sea of the North Atlantic. There will be! plenty of room for everyone, airy, luxurious staterooms, meals prepared under the direction of the best of chefs served in de luxe dining salons. be dancing and music by here will night; deck hours spent rteous stewards joughboys and t ocean liners sports by day in steamer chairs; e to wait upon the e every comfort that gr can provide. “In the return of the veterans to France,” Mr. Elder stated, “we are dopting the democratic procedure of eliminating all restrictions between classes aboard the liners. The vet- erans who have saved to obtain the lowest cost transportation will have the same liberties on deck and in the luxurious public rooms of the steam- ers as the man who paid for a de luxe suite.” Low Rates Provided Extremely low rates are provided for the Legionnaires who go to France for the 1927 Legion con- vention. The lowest rate which in? cludes transportation both ways upon the Atlantic, transportation in France and lodging in Paris, will be about 3175. The rates will range up to about $450. It is estimated that the to be entire trip can be made for as little in. love with. Lenora. Gi school git], has just ma wedding delayed for years be- cause they had to take care of rela- tive He is 68 and she is 61. . s, then a ied her. The New York—Martin L. yea Davey, 42- old congressamn from Ohio, who is physically perfect, is now carrying insurance totaling $1,050,000, He just took out half a million more. Quillayute d a@ sea beast twice as big as an elephant, with eyes: that work like trapdoors, which aj peared 60 miles southwest of here, nearly upsetting their boat. The In! dians ed their examination of to a hasty glance. They made record time to shore. ——S—— : wy | NEWS BRIEFS | Chicago.--Daylight _ savings time goes into effect in Chicago for the eighth consecutive year at 2 a. m. Sunday, April 25. Clocks will be turned ahead one hour and wii] jot be retarded until September 26, Hilo, T. A.--! ina Loa, the “Long Mountain,” calmy dozed into a cot paratively peaceful sleep last night agter heaving up millions of tons of liad fire from a half dozen ent sources for six days. »” a former “lumberjack” “ Smith in Tree Planting in New York! d is showing Miss Evelyn she used to plant trees in in India, New York’s Central Park just how Inc)$India. That used t> be “Queenie’s” regular job before ‘she emigrated. as $300. The tri, back to France in 1927 will not be the first occasion when vet- erans from the United States have been served by the Canadian Pacific steamers. Duri: steamship of the Canadian Pacific fleet. was taken over by the Briti Admiralty for war work. ed as than in as arme transports, a the ng d million course of the war every They serv- cruisers and carrying more war passengers the war. Pol- lowing the entry of the United States into the war, thousands of Americans were conveyed to France by the Cana- dian ships: During the entire ar only seven men were lost among the more than one million carried, through enemy attack. Following the war the transports and cruisers were reconverted to the passenger service and are now num- hered among the most comfortable and speedy steamers on the. North Atlantic. “We want to make France next year thoroughly demo: ni the trip to tative of all those ” declared Mr. “If this is accomplished Le. gionnaires of moderate means must begin saving now. thousands throughout the country There are alr are making regular deposits in the official clubs, organized ated depo American ii in special Local Legion posts are o:gani! American Legion co-operation with banks through au- rization obtained from John J. Wicker, Jr., National Travel Director | for the France Convention committee of the Legion. PURO LD TSIEN AOE : 7 | Last Minute i | News Bulletins | Legion Savings design- Savings clubs in > Chicago, April 20.—(4)—Ogden T. McClurg, wealthy head of A. C, McClurg and company, publish- ers, and internationally known explorer and sportsman, died to- day, the result hemorrage suffered late yester- of a cerebral | day. Paris, April 20.—()—The French franc steadily declined today, and when the bourse clos- ed it had reached a new low level of 30,32 to the dollar, as compared with yesterday's clon- ing figure of 30.27. Quincy, if. April 20.—() | 7-Three distinct taps were heard ' today by the rescuers who are digging away the cave in that entombed six miners last Satu day night in the Grizzly Creek Tunnel near » The rescue |. squad had 12 feet of rock and |’ dirt to remove before they reach | the place in the tunnel where the |. miners were working. | Marshall’s Death Mandan, Fred | was killed, wi D. | _ Hi,” Marshall, | traveling man and driver tomobile struck by a f; | at Breien, N. D., Saturd: | when his companion Harol this noon dite Ig-Expected Hourly April 20.—Up)— Huron, 8, D, ofan au- ht train ay morning T. Biount in. ver; critical condition and attenfants an- { ticipate his death at any hour. Mrs. | Marshall and her baby are here with him. Murphy, Chicago. general merc! | Antlers. Mi .P, Home Trade Store. $25,000; Morris H. Pittel, Bessi Pittell, both of Ellendale, and J. M. Siegel, ‘Smith & Saltn andise, Smith, J: O. Saltnes: | all of Makoti, and Safety League Publishing Co., seo tho Taco Rar ani Blonde, ub, -P. 8. Young || CORPORATIONS |: | l'"“g | Murphy & Murray Co4 Grand | vestments, eta 00000" Bf | vestments, etc. t E. Murray, M. W. Murrs ‘ond M bond in- urray and M. Ellendale, or 28000 Bessie Smith, ‘Joey Schmidt, | ter level at the present time.” 0] her chum evidently timed their stunt WATER LEVELS UNAFFECTED BY Lack ‘of Rainfall ‘Given’ as ‘Cause of Low Waters i During Last 3 Years Chicago, April 20—-®)—A. survey tending to show that diverting of wa- ter from Lake Michigan by Chicago has had no appreciable effect on| | levels was issued today by the! | Chicago Chamber of Commerce, | The sugvey maintained that many} i times during the last 14 years every | [one of the five great Inkes has had! 4 mean water level higher than the| | peak level in any of the 20 years) | previous to 1912, . “Lake Superior reached a peak of | 603.8 feet above gea level in 1916,” the survey said. “This was the high- jest level in this lake since 1869 and jand 1877, when it reached 604 feet, the record height.. Lake Michigan, from.which water is diverted into} the Chicago di canal, reached | a peak in 1917 and 1918 of 682 fect, | the highest since 5 ! | “Lake Huron reached a peak in} 1917 and 1918 of 681.9 feet, the high- est sinee 1889, Lake Erie reached| 574 feet in 1943; 573.8 in 1917; 673.8) in 1919, and all these peaks were: her than in any Year since 1804. | e Ontario reached a peak of; .. § 8.1 feet in 1913; 247.9 in DIT and| Miss Hazel Pilcher of St. 11919, which were higher than the; Suing August -C. Naert, j peaks reached previously since 1890, | real estate man, for $5: exeept in 1908 when the peak went to! of promise, 248.6 feet. 13 parents “Almost all these high marks were! fections. reached many years after Chicago had| nounced begun diverting the maximum amount of water allowed by the war Separt- | ment, namely 10,000 cubic feet. ‘The! | mean low levels show a condition on| s, the a e 2 1 par with the mean high level | Medina Farmer Say: 8 low «waters of the last three years! {bein equaled and lowered in feasy | Brost Brothers Had instances during the years fr 1860 ‘. ee ater tenes trom Threatened His Life Reasons Given + i nie i ! The survey showed that Lake Mich- Jamestown, N, April. 20%) — ligan hit an extreme low level of| William and’ Otto Brost, farmers of 577.37 feet lant January, or 40 inches | south of Medina, are being arraigned below normal. Five reasons were giv-| in justice court here today on the Louis ig rich young 000 for breach for alienation of his af- mwhile, it has been an- Naert will marry another girl. next month, { en for this: complaint of their nei! ‘rei Unusually light rainfall, 22 inches.| Hutt, who “cbtees: that’ nat Ban Increased flow in Detroit river,| brothers went gunning for him, cight inches. Diversion at Chicago, five inches. Retention of water in Lake Super- ior for power purposes during dry period, three inches. Diversion of the water from Lake Erie, two inches. “All these points, except the fi are fixed and go on annually,” s the survey. ‘Lack of rainfall, there- fore, is the sole cause of the low wa- threatening to “get him before night fall” last Saturday, The cause of the row is said to have been a dis- pute over tenantry. Dance at Moran’s Farm, Wednesday evening; Aoril 21. ‘Girl Befriended . By Welfare Worker Steals Her Auto: Jamestown, N. D., April 20--4e)—| Mrs. Stella Ball Shepley, child wel- fare worker, was handed a rude jolt, of ingratitude here yesterday when a dependent girl, whom she has had un- der her guidance for some weeks,! stole her Ford coupe and with an-, other girl of juvenile age left for parts as yet unknown to authorities | ere, ; 4 : " Mrs. Shepley had taken the’ girl!| in quick cooking oats from the county some time ago < and placed her in a_ local church —“Quaker”’ flavor school. Yesterday Mrs. Shepley drove, to the school and left her car stand: 1 ing out in front while conferrin, NCk TAK ee: with school authorittes. irl and QUICK QUAKER—the world’s -fastest hot breakiast—the famous toasty flavor of the real Quaker Oats has Deen retained. That, to you, is important; for flavor is the. big point, after fall, in food. Nov other brand has that flavor. It took Quaker Oats experts years to attain it, and, at the same time, give you3 to 5 minute cooking. Quaker milling, too, retains. much of the “bulk” of oats. And that makes | laxatives less often needed. Protein, carbohydrates, and vitamines and this “bulk” are thus combined in making Quaker Oats an excellently balanced food. That is why, in quick cooking oats, as in the regular, the important point | to millions is to see the picture of a | re, on the package of Oats that Quick Quaker alone will satisfy you - well, hopped into the car and drove off and were not missed until Mrs. Shépley discovered her car gone. Mrs. ‘Shepley has sworn out a warrant harging petty larceny against the girl and authorities are seeking trace of the car. One of the missing girls is a ward of the North Dakota Chil- dren's Home and the other is a gounty charge. Both are 14 years of age. Capt. Scales of Mankato Inspects Guard | Companies Capt. H. M. Seales .of Mankato, ‘Minn., United States army. officer as. signed to the work of inspecting the various units of the North Dakota National Guard, conducted the annual inspection of the quartermaster com: , of Bismarck’s guard units, her ight. Tonight the local inf it, Company A, will be given i inspection. ° National Guard officers here for the inspection itcluded Major B. C. Boyd of Grand Forks, commanding the third batallion, 164th infantry, Adju-; tant General A. G. Fraser, Colonel D. 8, Richie of V: id ity, Colonel 'M. H. Sprague of Grafton, Major Harold ‘Sorenson, Capt. W. M. Spann, Capt. Fred Moore of Grafton, Capt. George Beier of Carrington and Ser- geant H. A. Jon |Babe Ruth Hits * of Season Today | Washington,., April 20.) q Ruth, Yankee home run idag, Ht ine first circuit drive of the season to- day off Walter Johnson in the first inging of a game between New York . and the Senators. Mrs. Henry Hartley — . ., Died This Morning ae — irs, Henry Hartley, a, resident of Bismarck for many years, died | this morning at the heme of her daughter, Mrs. N. E. Jensen, 516 | Fi th street, after a | “It's all right on top,” she said,. peering over the side of the car at the flat tire. | \*Your ingurance at'a casual glance may seem all tight and proper. But when you begin to think about it -». about the many ‘ things you have added to week#’ illness with heart trouble. (EE Sars? XeMre Of age soe | your home and your busi-, béen. ermpleted, will be a ness, it is quite likely that bah (fa ! you will find that you have 1 Meceiatis. Sag is, sat not enough insurance. The Sumak pak be oaea eaert Cansult this Hartford was especially. made for her in Tours. ‘| Agency today. 8 in’ New York use more| , ee nao'nso incandescent tamps. is MURPHY ok with Gas. it’s the Mair: k wiht “The ‘Hos ie Knows | BROADWAY" Phone 677. Dance at Mormn's farm, Wednesday evening, April 21, * at ‘20 rm am em Om om ORDO Om rit manent nacyee wen enw sn enn arn nd is asking $25,000 of : | ' Petitioners Wil] Seek Mandamus Writ to Compel Election Minot, N. D., April 20-—(@)—Coun- seb for petitioners seeking the recall | of Police Commissioner A. J. Brun- ner today announced that they will apply to the district court in a short time for a writ of mandamus to com- pel the city commission to call an election. The commission yesterday after- noon, by @ three to two vote, rejected the petitions on the ground that they were insufficient as to form and sub- stance. Cream Rate Hearing | Is Set For April 26) He Ffng. on the, applicaticn of | North’ Dakota Gites “for in-! TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1926 interstate rates on cream Sis tewe gar by the Interstate Commerce Commission for April 26 in Minneapolis, Frank Milhol- tan, chairman of the board of rai!- road commissioners, announced to- day. When the ean ial their ap- ications several weeks ae railroad board immediately asked the Interne Commerce Commission to withhold decision pending ba hearing. The request inted. Aire Milhollan characterized th> coming hearing as an important: one since about 25 per cent of the | cream juced in Nerth Dakota Fee snippet out of the state and would be subject to the proposed higher rates. At least two mem- ters of the railroad board will an- pear before the commission in addi- tion to rate experts from vai parts of the state. oO eae With tworpairs: of trous- 4 ers $42.50 There’s comfort in our excellent TAILORING GORDON HATS $5.00 Bergeson’s . “e"=Vou'll Be Sitting - ‘On Top of the World” | Yes, way up on top in one of our new Spring Suits. You'll add hundreds of dollars to your ap- pearanee on a small investment. HART SCHAFFNER'& MARX $45 With two pairs ef trous- ers $55.0€ ‘0 pairs of trousers reasonable prices and values CLOTHING TOBEGOOD TO YOURSELF P..C. Remington, Pres. jon: will avoid delay, as time and attention. , OUR materials Memorial day ‘will on s REMINDING YOU One of our little Home Savings Banks, placed where you'll see it often, is a quiet, cheerful, but insistent’ reminder that every day should be a saving day. Open a Savings Account with us and let one of these Home Banks help * you keep the account growing! N. I. Roop, Cashier A. V. Sorensen, P. C. Remington, Jr., Ass’t, Cashiers on: be-here, Placing your ‘order now ménument or marker requires special PRICES ARE THE LOWEST hy the carload, in the rough, freight charges on local shipments from the WRITE FOR CATALOGUE’ ‘Bismarck Marble & Granite Works J. A. Graham, Vice Pres, because we buy our saving you the big east. . ve the..