The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 30, 1926, Page 28

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1926 PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE , m Ex on - a SS = 2 - . am SUCCESSFUL RAISING OF CORN HAS = | Corn Cultivating Tools Used By Indians WOMEN ‘SIN’ BY | ‘Nowra pakora’s LARGEST GROUND FLOOR GARAGE | iii a Si $$$ $$ i - MADENORTHDAKOTAADAIRYAND Se TRAN Aer ko al ) oe TAKING WORK ||: ae foe HOG STATE, J. A. KITCHEN SAYS. Pe Bs ae le e ‘ \ ‘ Se In May, 1906, there was published | the summer. ‘We quoted the only . | ° : bythe state department of agricul- on corn found in the North x | ry ture a monthly magazine to advertise | Dakota Magazine a years ngo, ex- Th in Ek Se ie the state's resources and promote |cepting indirect references and this. ose in Ekecuti ition: ‘ immigration. So optimistie was the | vignificant paragraph: “More. that | executive Jhontitenotd , uthor of the tirst article published |one hundred years ago, Lewis and | Work Too Hard, B.P. Ww? | if that he opened with these lines: . {Clark would have been compelled to | ead ae | “L hear the tread of pioneers, | return enst, but for the corn they H C. Official Says 1 | Of nations yet to he, obtained from the Indians on the | } “4 t The first low wash of waves | Missouri river. North Dakota has lee - where soon always produced corn.” With the New York, Oct. 30—U)—The ten-! Shall roll a human sea.” Mandans and other tribes of Indians, jdency of women in business to take a In this same number there appear-|in bysone days, corn was regarded as, themselves too seriously is a sin in" ed an article on “Bonanza Farming|a main cultivated crop for human j the eyes of the executive secretary of | in North Dakota” and, speaking of | food. some 47,000 women who belong. to the | The Ingstad garage at the corner of Broadway and First streets, just completed a month ago, has the dic- | tinetion of having more ground floor space than any other garage in the state. It was built by E. A. ,@, Hughes, and is under the management of Fred. B. Ingstad, registrar of motor vehicles for North Dakcta. We believe the past span of 20/ | years marks the general development , of corn as a general crop in North! Dakota . Suecess with corn has made | {North Dakota a dairy and hog state. |The rapid development of the dairy industry accompanied the same dev-! clopment of the larger acreages of corn, Hogs always follow corn. We have been extremely fortunate in dairy animals and hogs in that the |North Dakota climate is healthful and we experience little animal dis- euses--far less than the per cent, of animal diseases in states long re- nowned for great corn production. the Dalrymple acquired in 18 quoting Mr. Dalrmyple, now over 1,000 xcres of corn every year, and the crop has matured every year since 1888.” | Federation of Business and Profe | sional Women’s Clubs. i ;, “Women cannot close the office jdoor and forget business when they | go home.” said this executive, Miss | Emma Dot Partridge. | {now only Michigan und Wisconsin| women as a factor in its war plans, cars than the Hoosier except as nurses, . ie pha fowayat: veey. of the early| This situation has been brought well-known Indiana made cars now about through the enactment of the are in the market. The Cole, National! naval res¢rve act, which limits navy and Pathfinder no longer are made.} personnel to males and the Navy now Ohe Premier factory makes only cabs.| finds itself farnishing the Army with Stutz is out of control of the Stutz) data on the value of women in war | plant, and since elias 3 Ap fe that pikes farecgh 3 own ex- :, iH érn, has made the . S. perience in the World wa: Lies in Basement of In-| “The Montoc, Lafayette and Maxwell,| “At the height of the war 11,880 | all Indiana made cars, aren't manufac-| women woge the navy uniform’ as Feel Challenge To Men Her explanation is that \ business eeling of insecurity, Miss | women take| a challenge to make good. A = world and still strug- “Conseanently, they work too hard| 1 een wom in executive Positions. «iss Partridee declared Vow “Where @ man will knock off work Now For maturing, especially for “hogging off,” flints come first; for, fodder, silage and to be J.usked, flints crossed with dented corn are very successful. Among the dest varieties Northwestern dent; innesota No. 13 and originated by the agricultural college experimental station, the sub-stations and through | efforts of seed houses. The year of 1924 saw the forget it and play golf, a woman is) qj i i ” All Varietien Grown Here a * dianapolis Basiness House | tured now. In place of these pioncers| “yeomanettes” and, reserve nurses BP Atiiust an “wariatics ut corn “ate Inguatlon et rroceeeten cin mires oe | jn the automotive field are the Mar-| and the Marine Corps had 200 "Mar, ladw suc in the state : j immediate acquaintances, 1 do. not —Ran 20 Years mon, Stutz and Deusenderg, of India-| inettes” doing clerical work, t napolis; the Studebaker at South | Bend; the Elcar at Elkhart; the Dav iat Richmond; the Chrysler at New-| castle; the Auburn at Auburn and the Lexington at Connersville. Army Studies Uses pelis blacksmith! Of Women in Wartime that went to another Hoosier, Elwood | Haynes, because his application fo: patents on his engine were deni | Black sought patent papers in 1881, two weeks after the Otto Gas Engine ompany of Mannheim, Germany, filed for American protection of a gas engine, The last member of the Women's Marine Corps Reserve, Corporal May Garner, of New York, retires this fall and orders are there can be no more women in the Marines. The only wo- men left in the Naval establishment ure the members. of the Navy Nurse | Corps, numbering 475, and the Navy Department recently extended to them a measure pacapeiderstion in, Tes- cribing unifopm. x ions for short; er skirts and ORE hh ir, shri know a single woman who pla Indianapolis, Oct. 20--) Time’: ted in; relentless hand has léft only the bro. den-, ken, rust eaten frameof the fi sh man-| gasoline driven vehicle whieh now lie descriptions of} the basement of an Indianapolis business house. * Misc Partridge has women her files who are horse breede: ‘tists, sheriffs, brokers, varni | ufacturers, and all i professions. Women More Conscientious scale “In all, they are much more coi entious than men,” she continued. “That ig another quality that develops | voman’s tendency to s ion acres. In regions; . quality is so serious as a situation that we are contemplating « depart- ment whereby recreation may be Urged upon the business women.’ hay was short this year, 1926, | ———— ee eae | con® well cultivated was the farmers’ | . MOTOR VEHICLE OFFICIALS OF FOUR s.irtsdsoPsre ceo jhot be any more courteous ip their @enlings than men, Miss Partridge id L, | said. = ' carriage maker, eak of | Washington, Oct. 30.—(@)—The Army is looking around to ascertain the possible uses for women in war time to release men from cooking, laundering and a host of clerical posi- tions, but the Navy, which mothered the idea, is barred from considering corn acreage in North Dakotd, prac- tically i 1 &#& Great Northern locométive, built | in 1893 at a cost of $10,728, is well on \ ‘its way to a million and a quarter miles of service. Its most striking achievement was 203,339 miles with-_ out an overhauling. ' ; Official statistics in the office of state commissioner of agricul- d labor give the folldwing on corn both for Burleigh county and the entire state. Ran Twenty Years. Black was offered patents on his differential gear and floating rear te xle, but disgusted, he refused them. 5 tion for feed and fodder. “Busy men are gruff, why not busy women? h ; 3 é ; Not that I approve gruff-| He lived to see both become univer- : Burleigh page ll Bushels| St. Paul, 0c (#) -Methods of | tended representation, is planned for’ ness. The world is used to expectirig | sal equipment. gids i Be ecias Veav:tadbed oP edder ararten etna | mediliig he: [ieenbe: eltharigarikesivs | @UIy swebecamer j the woman to act the hostess and, if| Blz n operating a forge and! The meeting was called following) she is anything e 1915 5006 2163-41276 was discussed at a conference of state| numerous truck operators who have in gasoline engine propulsion of ve- so cine ivan mag 008 2462 391662534) automobile officials from four states! complied with the Minnesota license) y1,,Sex Trait Too Strong Yet hicles. He eventually perfected an by a Deen An increasing acreage of corn | 1217 pri BEAN here today. Jaw and who were oceasionally oper-| Miss Partridge says that it is not hed to a type We started our Used Car business iaadiapito every section of North | 1218 S021 4236 69128) Besides’ Minnesota, states repre-|uting in neighboring states, It was| College women who ‘are ing the a runabout. He with the idea thet yaieta, cv tte margin of thal 101! 8689 128081 | sented were Towa and North and| pointed out that these operators were| highest positions held by business hae @ good carat a fair a) Sean. tis margin of tbe) 1990 8038 126828 South Dakota. Ten other states in-| arrested and fined upoy conviction of| Women today, but the girls who have | ren years age ; price is better than a fair car at a bar- ee ere. we! 1921 13694-92737 vited to send representatives did not| operating trucks wihout a license. Rone through the laborious stens up- | busin tb gain price. That idea has now become seed et or ee ining ‘the 30459 142962! respond. It is hoped that some reciprocal leg-| Ward. Many college gradaates are ed it, Black first : ane re ae " bei tat ee His 21600 (39575 | Opposition developed in Minne-! islation will be passed by the various | 20t willing to undergo such an ap-} used n kerosene torch in his ignition & definite policy. Our customers can eee rari, to the acre form 1 20186 253286] sota’s suggestion that 4 25-mile neu-| adjoining states which would permit | Prenticeship, she added. system, but later procured a cumber-| tell you why, ; ee Noe, ine invuotiey 10103 9708 17000; tral zone ‘be created along all state] operations of trucks without making| She believes that women in busi-| some storage batter tie free spark athe acre is oda, dot wiles et Ewe tn boundaries, in which motorists from, licenses necessary in other state when| Ness have not yet achieved the frank. coil was imported from Atl ! Fe anne: for, alos) and of} = | neighboring states could operate with-| laws of the home state have been com:| ness and openness that the imperson- | weighed sixteen pounds M.B. GILMAN CO | hogred of: ‘honed it Le ‘Be le inthe 375096 216870 4222020' out special license. plied with: ality of busi lemands. | __ Two years after Black's failure, El- pone) ie acreage: Bi janted and the 6 309570 65210 964942 Another Meeting Manned action was taken by the| . ‘They are not just business womer | wood Haynes of Kokomo, an oil’ op- BROADWAY AT SECOND ST, s#mount bus! ‘adid Yields 257341 74340 1278943 It was suggested that legislation s of any proposals sub-| but women. While the average busi-| erator, who had perfected an auto- ‘. ‘ ts, ch Me Diaisehwitets 373025 57896 489780' might be held discriminatory, and] mitted. Those attending the meeting) ness man is interested in the women| mobile in the wagon works of Elmer oie veg TET tla ada bed ih 361762 241517 69441 1187793 might lead to other complications. | included Fred B.:Ingstad, registrar of| he employs only in so far as they| Apperson secured patents on his mae BISMARER experience, it is auc clan lad ields 153114 325925 81526 1729266 Another conference, with more ex-| motor vehicles, Bismarck, N. D. contribute to the development of his| chine. It is today in the Smithsonian . \ . Ree eee sent Feed 609788 Avosss sot & ae Ee | business, the woman, at least, until] Institute at Washington. labeled r' y sofa. 658633 454170 7 s ; ae she gets to ‘the God knows |when’| “First gasoli ile. ‘ Selected seed, the long hours of sun- 819 468332 3141716 9 1 barriers break up what is reajly Re. playing hide and seek with 7 ‘Others Follogea A USED .cCAR 1s ONLY aS DEPENDABLE ‘shine during the growing season and 449492 5803592 a unified metropolitan district. the idea of matrimony. She thus| Indianu became the cradle of the AS THE DEALER’ WHO SELLS IT intensive cultivation ¢ proved 605154 338B418 Some Chicagoans, feeling that their|:serves two masters ani impairs her| automobile industry through the ac- \ > North Dakota is a state of imp 047 442271 2602237 eity is not fairly treated in state| economic potentiali tivities of Haynes and Apperson, and : ‘4 in corn production. It has | i : affairs, have proposed a new state of 2 3 Pee eee aE Sa al ssuccessfully grown that practi ly It is estimated that in 192 29,090 | Northern I is and adjacent ter- { devery farmer in the state, in plan-|acres were planted to corn, while the ritory of which Chicago is the center, ip 2c ning crop rotations, uses corn tor the field that is to be cultivated during total acreage planted to corn in the A Chicago legislator recently asked state this year is placed at 780,734. the census bureau to include in the Sakasi ‘ pinion metropolitan census, all persons in a Chicago, Oct. 30—()—Through | fifty mile radius from the city’s cen- hundreds of years from the days of | ter. j; the Venice of more modern times the OFFERINGS OF OPERA AND ORCHESTRA, 2° * "sit tical history. Now a few | alvanced political economists are discussing the possi- Go the athoe bial Sern Buby, of some leading American cities terpretations’ will ‘flash through the| ‘The novelties of the Philharmonic | reates “Chiat ond Mi ¥ork pig programs, both operatic and orches-| include an_ unfumiliar Stravinsky ticularly, whose spheres of influrece tral, which await music lovers this|work: the Scriabin piano concerto; and environs have crossed the borders season. elties ha been kar- | 2 Fantasy for piano and orehestra| of their own state, are prominently NYSE. at home and abroad by New| by Darius Milhaud; the third sym-| mentioned, York masters, who have arranged an! phony by Szymanowski, Blach's ‘“Is- | elaborate list of premieres. fi preludes | *Ainerican, as well as French, Ger- Palestrina”, man and ‘Ita posers, have | Artur Honegger's “Tempest” over- jturd and a de Falla work for piano The government ¢ould only reply that it could net include citizens of} another state. The ago city limits parallel the Indiana border for several miles. Across the line are the great steel centers of Hammond, Michigan y and Gary, allied to the industrial- sections of South Chicago. | Good Battle Plane Is Always Dangerous Tax Question The continual warfare between the} Dayton, 0., Oct. 30.—UP)—A good | urban and country districts of such | battle plane is necessarily an unsafe | states, as Illinois and New York is| plane, and it is the element of danger seen as another reason why a sep- i it Jand orchestra, ES | aration of a city from the rest of the | that offers the pilot of such a¢ship . Symphony Offers Variety. , state is within the range of possi-| his greatest protection in aerial bat- | mo i Rian ists at tae eee | ies | Otticers of the Army Air Corps and! comes a similar list. of innovations. | "The ancient cry similar to: " 3 : Headi it,is a symphonic poem, ; ation. without. Tepresentation?” iF aerials of HeLaok te nap pas by Jean Sibelius, the | been raised in both Illinois and New prongs Lynagpiee giles pub i | cautey’ bath manrtest, cities in the! SUtiity, These Tittle shine meet be | | they are not equitably represented in pr ea ge roa Paige a zagging, or to avoid: his sudden ru the state legislatures in proportion to their population, wealth, influence from behind a cloudbank. They must | be highly maneuverable. 4 and the size of their tax bill. In , Minois, for instance, u downstate ma- This means that the controls must be sensitive to an extreme degree. jority has halted every attempt ef to be presented by rosch, dean of American conductors, | Chicago resentatives to vat | When Pye ar gee pir pe org eg |tes his ailerons or other control he Opera company. & 2 | Meise to be Punctyated welt Oe through a legislative reapportion- Will have its premiere November 16/ merous other new works. There | ment program, which, it is claimed is thi ll be a performance of Honceger's ir provided in the, state constitution. | som Pivtenas Ted Sone een pro-|“Phaedre”, based on D’Annunzio’s | ropose New State i ea , os Magic | work of the same names. ei The metropolitian district of New Hacene see obtlcers sey pat makes A .,New Talent Found Abroad. ; York is: in three stat erous in the hands of an inexperien- While abroad this summer Dam- i New Jersey and Connecticut. Chica- ced pilot. More than one death may rosch picked up a new Spanish work fo has overrun northern Ilinois andj be attributed to the fact that the | *Deux Esquisses Symphoniques” by . its suburbs reach into Wisconsin and | pilot's experience’ had been almost A city, however, cannot! wholly on “slow” ships, and had not Sialge vg Pe recast - considers | TAMAR i jthe most talented of the younger pus! mits across the border | e ‘of nec- Spanish composers. He also will! into another state, so that in the pear aees Frog i preeent a number of new works by | case of New York and Chicago arti- pressure” planes. the younger French composers. | . Among these will be “La Nuit En- | sorcele” by Louis Aubert, “Les Ren- contres” by Jacques Iberta and North Dakota’s Largest i to this country to perform the piano ae x aay S fs ae part of his work, ‘ A complete Wagner program, in- cluding the first act of Walkeure, with eminent soloists, also is planned. |porary German music also will be in- tried out. opera contributed a with many of the compositions coming from the younger talent of this and other countries. A notable program will be that of the New York nphony orchestra on ““Modern’ Music, Pleasant an Unpleasant”, in which Walter Dam- roseh’ will “air his on the | works of the new school. } Two New Operas. ' the second major by Alfred Casella, the Italian composer - pianist, who him- he King’s | self will play the piano part at the Taylor, and premiere performance. posthumous! The early part of th “Turandot”, are-#the new which will be presided ove: by Da “he season, TUN ivals on the Metropolitan TOOT OTT Re include Mozart’: Figfe”; Beethoven braise Thomas’ “ba-Forz: pat ce Amors Dei Tre eS 2Qrechestras Import New ks. 2*Pan and the Priest”, by Howard Manson, is the foremost new work tebe presented by the Philharmonic stra, under the direction of fillem Mengelberg. Another new ‘ing is “A Poem for Violin and stra”, by Templeton Strong. composers are Americans, h Strong lives in Genev: rturo Toscanini will open his @mluction of the Philharmonic or- ta in January with Beethove: ad i: Chief Joy _ = of Methodist Dean Malden, Mass., Oct. 30.—()—The of Methodist ministers marriage ceremoni ‘of 102, » New York symphony, and will introduce elias : i of the newer works of young Braunfel’s romantic contem- Expert Greasing and Washing OPEN DAY AND chureh, God never intended that a machine should transmit message to his children. e personalty of the speaker and the inspiration of hi presence in the pulpit are lost to ale jtaseng ‘hen a minister A NIGHT | Fall Hats that this spirit can over the radio.” The venerable clergyman thinks that women will eventually organize their forces and drive tobaceo from the nation. Favers Small Salaries. Commercial ambitions, h« oung men from the ministry e '. ye en today, enever a young couple comes to Egome here of The Rev. Edward the aged In fact, it of his chief j g Mar Bett receives visits from grown old, whom hi d-in their youth. tie Mae bene ier 6 for urther for a smartly styled fall or no winter Hat at less usual price, for is an as- sortment that will satisfy even the moat: particular. Make Your Selection Early “ ‘Special for next week anil during the Corn Show. in the New England eon- half a century. their <Blidren Gre “end their pete de- afavorite A minister should re- » Best ener he anid, as te © BISMARCK, ND. eg Two Blocks West of Post Office. “NRO RIA STE TTI TIC SLE Se Si EER RRTIN ~ , A NAL HOP

Other pages from this issue: