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HAS HIGH TEST HERDFOR MAY i Bros. Have Second - “High Herd—State Peni- | tentiary Third skowski of Braddock} est test herd for the , in the Burleigh coun: | Testing association, #¢- ing to the testiny results just/ @mnounced by H. E. Balk, tester. T 4 pounds of milk] 4-27 pounds of butterfut, Schneid- s@ Bros., Bismarck, own the Raving the second highest test. The produced an average of 908 is of milk with 35.6 pounds of fat. ird place goes to the penitentiary herd, ‘of 853 pounds of n junds of butterfat. . Garske owns the high t h of May. &§ 2,096 pounds of milk with unds of butterfat, thereby living up to her name “Pailfull.”’ Phe penitentiary has second high teat cow, producing 1,544 pounds of milk with 75.6 pounds of butte fat. The ration for these cow consisted Sf pasture and grain, fed according to the production of the animal. ing more ‘at during F. J. Splon: @wns the hi po Owners of cows prow than 4v pounds of butter the month are: ‘Owner Schneider Bros. L, J. Garske P. M. Gosney FP, J. Splonskowskt Penitentiary 5 3 Penitentiary 9 Dale's Dairy 1 Most of the cows thut produced Pmore than 40 pounds of butte during the month were fed grain, ac- Leording to Mr. Bulk. UESS WORK IS REMOVED FROM 4 MOLDING SAND, ‘ 4 Methods Evolved by | Which Foundrymen Can _ Test Sand’s Properties Ithaca, N. Y., July 15—(AP)— tery hus taken the guess work A of another industrial process. Tt hns evolved standard methods testing molding sands which en- the foundryman to tell whether sand he is using for a given ‘easting has the right properties for preventing flaws, whether it is stron and whether it contains the proper venting qualities. Worked At Cornell The standardization, which already ia effecting substantial savings in industry, has been verfected by ‘an. international research committee ized by the American Foundry- n and the National teh Mauch of the re- work that attended the de- ent of the standard tests has ratory of ge- @ result, pow nded several pieces of 4 for testing the styengt orem and texture of He ands. Previously the tman had had no accurate means ining whether he was using that exactly met his re- ‘owing cla imere, Pa. 4-/than from just a little distan Fairest of the Co- ity, Greencastle, I — Esther Hackman of Peru, Ill., is the prettiest girl in De Pauw Univers- ind, Her fellow students picked her out of 30‘ éntries ‘in a contest conducted by the editor of the University year book. Dayton, 0., July 15.—The silken thread secreted bysthe caterpillar is a flimsy, brittle fiber, but woven into cloth of the proper texture it may make a parachute by which aviators’ lives al ed, Hence twenty-eight persons who owe their lives to the United States army parachute automatically have become members of “The Caterpil- Jar Club.” Eighteen of those who have suc- cessfully entrusted their lives to the army parachute are army. officers, four are civilians—one of them a woman—three air service privates, and one hails from each of the fol- s ions: naval officer, marine offi marine sergeant, and air serv Used Two Parachutes The dependability of the para- chute was first demonstrated on August 24, 1920, when Flier O’Con- nor, a civilian aviator, staged an ex- hibition leap at McCook field, here. He had a “pet brand” of “chute” he wanted to try out, but was persuad- ed to take along the army brand, He jumped from an altitude of 2,000 feet, and fell 1,500. Unable to open his “pet”, he resorted to the army “chute” and landed safely. The longest “leap for life” on the Caterpillar Club records, is that of Lieutenant J. T. Johnson, Selfridge Id, Mich., who jumped from an altitude of 10,000 feet over the Allegheny Mountains near Eagles- The plane was dem ed in the mountains, but Lieutenant Johnson landed safely in an apple tree. An oil leak had caused the accident. Usually, a flier falls several hun- dred feet before the ute” opens, hence it is' considered “luckier” to jump from several thousand feet On one occasion, however, “the army parachute functioned in a'150- foot leap, saving the life of Walter ‘q@pirements and consequently many pone ite spoiled due to experi- with various grades. Test Before Starti Now, however, he can test his sand he starts a casting, thus often the po: ity of costly With th me methods he ean maintain a daily control over the peapertion of his sand heaps. of the factors leading to the mn of the research commit- ‘was the gradual depletion of the osits of high grade molding sand ar increased costs of shipments fom new and less accessible beds. annual sand bill of the American irymen, it was estimate, had ‘to $8,000,000, und so scien asked to find a means of pi waste. _to Bible Found in a Whittier’s Poems Grand Forks, N. D., July 15—@)— hundred and fifty-one Biblical Sferences are found in the poetry bat Whittier, according to # thesis pared at North Dakota Univer- ity re by Miss Buelah Bom- (Bite, Bomstead'’s re- th showed, is one of the chief ‘of inspiration for poets and se of the greatest have apparently 2 it an unfailing spring when ‘Among y! ical Bometead are ur volumes of E. Rees, who landed safely on the Wilmington Pike, near Dayton, Round Faces Stand Best Chance Among Picture Studios Culver Ci Cal, July 15.—(AP) —Is your face round? Then your chances of success in the movies is greater than if your face were long, if you are one of the vast army of. people whose ambi- tions lie along this direction. The perfect camera face must be round, say Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer ex- perts, It makes little diference how exquisite the coloring or how per- fect the features, the contour of the face actually decides one’s fate in the, movies. The color of the hair and the eyes does not matter. There are just as many blue-eyed girls on the screen as there are brown-eyed ones. Norma Shearer, Eleanor Boardman, Lillian Gish and May McAvoy are only a few who have blue eyes, yet each one is a distinct photographic type. Should the features be regular? a disputed point. Many stars vers have capitlized certain defects, A pug nose, a crooked eye- brow, a very deep dimple has often characterized some star or player and made her more interesting than if she had absolutely perfect feat- ures. ‘A long, narrow face, it is pointed out is never effective on the screen, 28 U.S. AVIATORS, SAVED BY SILKEN PARACHUTES, FOR ‘CATERPILLAR CLUB’ June 13, 1924. This is the shortest successful drop op record. First “Leap For life” The first successful night “leap for life” was made by Lieutenant John A. Macready, erstwhile holder of the world’s altitude record. He experienced engine failure over Dayton on the night of June 18, 1924. He guided his plane over the city district; it crashed in an open space in the suburbs, and the flier landed after jumping 1200 feet. The first occasion upon which two men jumping from the same plane made cessful landings was August. 29, 4, when Lieutenant L. L. Kont: Private W. E. Goggin, Bolling Field, Washington, D. C., jumped 300 feet after the controls became locked. On June 17, 1926, Lieutenant James T. Hutchinson and Observer P. H. Stanley, McCook Field, imped 8,000 feet from a burning plane over Osborne, Ohio, and land- ed uninjured. They dropped 600 feet before their “chutes” opened. Woman Saved A Mrs, MacFarland, making an exhibition leap, wag saved by the army parachute over Grisard field, Cincinnati, after another type had failed. One of the most harassing ex- periences was that of Lieutenant E. H. Barksdale on May 13, 1924. The ship carrying Barksdale and Observer R. A. Anderson, went into a nose dive over, Fairfield, O., and threw the two men out of the “pit”. Anderson was killed, pre- sumably when his head hit some part of the plane. Barksdale’s “chute” was jerked open accident- ally, carrying him safely to e: rth. On Mareh 25, 1926, Bar! le’s life again was saved by an army chute, when he found himself cata- pulting towards the earth, wingless. He suffered. a sprained ankle when he hit the ground. “Just like Atepping off a street car,” he said, Williams and Alma Clark Hines vf Missouri, and Addie Clark Miller of Denver, and that she married ther father, William Anderson Clark, in Montana, after he deserteu his family at Stewartville, Mo., in 1879. Badger Predicts Fast Progress in Movie Production Hollywood — (AP) — Scientific progress in’ motion picture produc- tion is rapidly doing with the idea that pictures’ Cain be) made only in Hollywood or where it is sunny, Clarence G. Badger avers. Badger, who has directed man: pictures for Gloria Swanson, Will Rogers and Raymond Griffith, made some predictions, with re- ghrd to what the making af movies a few years hence will like. Quick transportation will enable movie companies to reach places where nature, or possibly man, al- ready has prepared the scenery for some desired set. North cae pic- tures will be made at the north pole and not on some studio lot in southern California with artificial snow and trick polar. bears. Improved cameras will make the cumbersome settings and equip- Pictures because the lights serve to accent-| be uate this longness. The face does not need to be plump, but it must be rounded in contour. Sally O’Neil, Gertrude Olmsted, Greta Garbo, Joan Crawford, the newer faces on the screen, all have passed the acid test of screen te of their well Lake] modeled, rounded fa: of Three Claimants ‘Bot i, July 16—U—Mrs. te, eet Aridow of William Clark, former sutte mer- real mines and so on. There will be movie studios in many laree ctor, olned Bodget on, anot Tr, re to predict that the ened ens of the not distant future will like the studio of any other artist, a quiet, secluded place where de- signing and brain work are done. TELL T! “You'll ay ged Pati a ean 0. the doctor to the “dejected man be added her voice to the|baby?” army who have hestifios that the late Senator William sews ‘Clark ‘of Montana was not the father of daughters’ SIMMER TIME PROVING GOOD RADIO SEASON |Reception During Past Few | Weeks Better Than Dur- ing All Last Winter Chicago, July 15—U)—Summer ong classed as a period in listance radio reception wus 1 name only, slowly is brings, jon among listening expert: The present immer season, but a few weeks old, has been productive of much better reception. than was all of last winter when night after night local stations were all that could be received with any satis- faction. + Sunspot Blanket Removed . Numerous theories have been ad; vanced for the change. Among the was the statement that the diminish- ing of sunspots, so much in. evidence last winter, has removed a magnetic blanket that tended to smother radio ignals when coming from a greater distance than 150 miles. Since the sun began .its southward journey, a noticeable improvement in recep- ion has been observed. Distance ations that could not be logged last winter, with no local transmitters in operation, can now be brought in with a powerful nearby station functioning. On local silent periods this class of reception equals if it does not surpass the so-called ideal where the interstation interference is the greatest, were most icult to bring in last winter. Now they turble in almost on top of one an- other. Leas Static and “Fading” One of the greatest drawbacks to ideal summer reception is the in- creased amount of static, attributed largely to thunderstorms. While static is ever in evidence, ,both in winter and summer, it dies out enough between summer thunder- storms so as to leave many periods wherein gconditions are as nearly ideal as could be hoped for. Another disturbance known as “fading,” where in the signals come and go with varying intensity, this summer has been less of a mar to reception than the fading of last winter. Hollywood, Cal., July 15—()—The sereen is ready for its Shakespeare and the film will have its “Bard of Hollywood” as surely as the stage produced its Bard of Avon. This is the pronouncement of Jesse L. Lasky, motion picture producer. And while he does not forecast the _ Buy to Best Advantage Now In This Great Clearance Sale Time to Save Most on Suits $30—$35 Suits Now $37.50-$40 Suits Now | $45—$50 Suits Now 4.75| $9.9-75| $34.75 vuee'sw| BOYS’ SUITS Discontinued line, white Fine quality Knicker Suits ~ and stripes. $2.50 pa- jama, now $10 Suits wee 8 750 $12 Suits 9.00 $1.25 $16 Suits Police \ $20 Suits Children’s Bathing Suits 25c . Discontinued styles in Arrow Collars 25c 4a 10c CAPS CAPS CAPS - Your choice of our fine stock of new, snappy $2.50 and $3 Caps $16 $ 16 $ 1 65 Boys’ Sport Manhattan Neckwear Blouses - 50c Soft Collars Union Suits Values to $1.50 5c Send your sizes and we will ship C. O. D. at once eee B er se & on’s . Clothing Bismarck, N. Dak. Suspenders Men’s Summer arrival of the super-scenarist this }* year or next, he declares the great need of motion pictures eventually will bring s answer—a screen Shakespeare. “A man will come who will tower above past writers and contempora- ries in the construction of original sereen stories,” Lusky said. “He will bring to the screen something new, some great thought, some finely wrought form of construction and story telling. He will open our eyes to new possibilities, to new dreams of the screen as a medium of art, and when he passes will creature mre nmnet ie hi maoy generations will gaze upon. ‘Arrival’ Not Far Away “There is a tremendous need and I, for one, am sure that the super- author of pictures will rise in the not too distant future. “The screen started from nothing thirty years ago and today ‘has de- |, veloped a marvelous medium of pic- torial story telling. “It i: artistic medium that technical po: in its literary and dramatic powe: “We have some trained writers w think in terms of the screen, who dream their dreams in terms of pic- ture art. We e trained technical workers, but most of them have come to us from the world of letters or from the short-story or newspaper field. We need these workers, Bat we also need men and women who are thlnkieg in terms of Olympus. ‘Will Use Old rial “We need someone nn whi gal gave it form. He pulled the drama out of its rut ‘of tradition and its heritage of being a religious spec- tacle. “We do not expect someone to come along with startling new plots, novel situations, or brilliant photographic effects. Shakespeare, as a matter of fact, worked with age-old material. Many of his plots were time-wprn, and had been used by many other writers in y countries. But it was what kespeare saw in them and what he saw in the stage as a nee of expression that maae him great.” Boring Holes in Volcano in Hunt For Informaton P)—Scientists who about placed between piece: pudding eaten as a sandwich with season- le vegetables. When the pudding is served as a dessert or for breakfast the meat gravy is.dispensed with and jam or marmalade adde about an inch or more, to the thickness desired. The pudding, as a side dish, is baked until it becomes brown and a little crusty, and during the baking pees eravy from the ne i oo ta = an over the pu and in York- ind may soon sell eggs b: shire, more pawn the meat is ‘ect . os Home in Paris For “Declining Years” “1 am lookin is‘apartment where spend our ‘deelinin; Pickford told Pari #] don’t necessarily mean old age July 16-—()—Yorkshire pudding, .served: with roast beef, is the moat popular of all made dishes ry | enjoyed by the people of-Great Brit- ain, I€ also is used as a dessert ; <3 hh \is. the way the Prince of when I say ‘declining years’,” ‘she jee Yikes it : “for one never knows when the public's taste in movie stars will change and our retirement might be closer we expect.’ Mary's choice of Pari: on account of its tree-' er to her explanations. jared that, next Gif! the most ardent con- the United States and ber As its name implies, the puddin, ated in the county of Yorke shire seve! generations ago. It comprises three ingredients—eggs, milk and flour. - The eggs are beaten up with the flour, and the milk: added in such quantity as to make rather a thick Better Kodak Finishing \ “YOU'LL NOTICE THE DIFFERENCE” Possibly wthe: noted dressmaking shops of Paris have something to do with the appartment idea of the Fair-, Mary is spending dresses. She sa: not bought a Paris dress for two years and she must really have something to wear. Von Hindenburg’s salary as presi: dent is about $12,500 a year. TQUT Fit will quickly put,» mente Fithelle mothe and thelr larvae Bepecbvink ” Segeom ee A Scientific Insecticide Itis and easy _ Fits the result of exhaustive: eee Me ’ ‘ x os ‘ also Ly methods because fae ane, Te ert outs : secta—and does it y *@PANDARD OIL CO.,(NEW JERSEY)