The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 15, 1927, Page 2

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AGE TWO MCARAGUAN SITUATION 1S. DEBATE TOPIC New Source of Controversy | Develops Over Move to | Make Testimony Public Washington, Jan. 15.—()—Whil congress was swinging into another debate on the Mexican-Nicaraguan | situation today, a new source of con- troversy developed over a move to| make public the testimony given Wed nesday before the senate foreign rela- tions committee. What was described by department as a “corrected” cop the stenographie record of Mr. logg’s testimony was sent to the com-| mittee by the secretary with his per-| mission to make it’ public, But Chairman Borah said some of the! things that took place in the com- mittee meeting had been stricken out of the record and that the committee | would consider later whether to give out what remained. When Secretary Kellogg appeared, before the committee he took along | his own stenographer, who took dwn the record in lieu of the committee Stenographers who usually are pres- | ent at such meetings. the state Ask Withdrawal of Troops The question of Latin-American policy was revived on the senate floor | today by a telegram received from President Coolidge’s home state. 1] signed by a number of prominent| Massachusetts citizens, who asked for withdrawal of all American forces! from Ni a except those “abso- | lutely indispensable for the protec- | tion-of American life and property.” | Senator Walsh of Massachusetts, a| Democrat, put the telegram into the record, and both he and his Republi-! can colleague, Senator Gillett, were prepared to take the lead in discuss-| Hostilé nationalist. demon: ing it. | these exclusive On the house side, Representative | ceeding along the Moore, Democrat, Virginia, expecte date in the day to deliver an addres on the Mexican-Nicaraguan problem. | In the recent sessions of the foreign committee he severely criticized the| course followed by President Coolidge | and Secretary Kellogg. Flaherty’s Letter Is Read i in Senate) McCABE ier ate EPISCOPAL | URCH Walter £ Vater, Pastor Divine service will be conducted Washington, Jan. 15—)—Pre- sentation in the senate today of a| Sunday as follows: letter from James A. Flaherty, head 10:30 a. m. Morni of the Knights of Columbus, declar-| Pastor will pr ing that organization “doesn't want |“The Conflict war with Mex led to a_bitter| choir will sing an a exchange between Senator Walsh,!W. J. Targart will give Democrat, Montana, and Senator Hef- | Solo. lin, Democrat, Alabama. | 12:00 noon. Sun School. (Classes The letter was put into the records | for all age: ' ‘ Adult classes the British conces! | the concession (right), while at the left, British Marines, with machine guns and barricade, are seen awaiting developments: in front of the Hankow customs house. the ion at Hankow. Sunday School at 11:00 a. Hon. Ben B. Larkin, Superintendent male chorus. service at 8 Evening o'clock. t to reach the eastern United States. . THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘TOMMIE ES, TARS AND as ow against foreigners in China have been answered with n men-o’-war and troops by the powers as shown in American sailors and Devil Dogs are seen above pr2- Barbed wire entanglements help English volunteers guard the entrance to m.* TRINITY ENGLISH LUTHERAN * CHURCH Ave. C and Seventh St. I, G. Monson, Pastor Services Sunday -morning at 10:45. Topi “How Christ Makes # Saint Out of a Sinner.” Special anthem by the choir. Sunday School at 12 m, All classes. Evening services at 7:30. Topic Revelation 7. The sixth chapter con- tains the prophecy of temporal pérse- Hl cutions; the seventh of spiritual temptations through the machinations | of the devil. All welcome, FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST FEEDING FOR WINTER EGGS) Watch the Prices, a Poultry Authority Warns—‘Tips’ on Rations gis Columbia, Mo—As far as feeding| for egg production is concerned, the [cree hundred pounds add seventy- five pounds of tankage and four pounds of salt. If one desires, a simpler mash may be used consisting of two poynds bran,| two shorts and one hundre tankage. To each hundred pounds of that mixture, one pound of salt should be added. If one desires, ground soy! beans or soy bean neal may be used{ in place of the tankuge. A good mash} of. this kind is as follows: Bran, 22; shorts, 22; cornmeal, 22; eeund soy beans, 30; bone meal, 4; salt, 1 Requires Salt and Bone Meal Attention should be called to the| fact that with that mash unsatisfac-| tory results will be secured unless the bone meal and salt are included. A flock of one hundred hens should! eat seven and a half to eight pounds daily of either of these mashes.; Ample feeding space should be pro-| vided, and in addition the hens have ac- cess to oyster shell, or a high grade. limestone rock which is Leet 95 per cent calcium carbonate be inconvenient to the round, it certainly simplifies’ the routine and will pay in the long L. KEMSEN. | Plants. of Frigid North and Torrid South Grow There! San Diego. Cal—This is the story of a man who built a cold storage garden on a rock. For three years Frank Strausser! strove to make flowers from frigid regions grow in his garden, which} he built on hardpan. He has sue- éceded. | At the outset his hillside back of; his hom resented a difficult prob- Tem. Ordinary picks and shovels would make little indentation in the surface. He resorted tv that, time- ‘proven Epeak ch he delie Strausser loaded a wagon with} dynamite and placed 500 sticks in various parts of@his lot. One by one these were’ exploded, loosening the earth. Then he ‘removed the rocklike substance and hauled in its| place 500 wagon loads of fertile soil.| Like Home, for a Spell { That was the beginning. At that time he was told that certain flow- ers from colder climes would not live in a warm American climate.| And so Strausser determined upon} is novel gardening plan—cold stor- age for the plants. Each autumn Strausser digs from the ground his gardenias, peonies and azaleas. He cuts the tops from the roots, and discards the tops.! Then he places the roots in his re- frigerator for the winter. Only in this way have I been ble to save these plants,” he sa! Plants from cold regions will live in a warmer place if they’re treated to a little of the climate they like part of the year, “My ice box furnishes enough of| that during the winter, and the spring they are glad to be in the open again, ready to grow.’ International Accord: Strausser has delighted in grow- ing plants local gardeners told him: vice, A / SATURDAY, JANUARY 16; 1927 How Farm Cost of Living — % With City. Columbus, 0., Nov. 10.— The actual cost of living’ on a farm is shown by a detailed comparison between the costs of products raised on the farm and the price which the same products bring in a city. This table was made by the Department of Rural Economies of | Ohio State University after a survey 3 | where accounts were kept by the farmers: Items used on farm Whole milk, quarts . 'Skimmilk, quarts .. Cream, quarts ... Butter, pounds Eggs, dozens, Poultry, pounds .... Pork, pounds . \Beef and veal, pounds .. | Potatoes, bushels Sweet potatoes, bushels Cabbage, pounds Sweet corn, dozens ..... {Green beans, gallons Tomatoes, bushels . Other vegetables . Apples, bushels wineries Pears, bushels ......... Peaches, bushels .... | Cherries, gallons .. Berries, quarts j Other fruits .. Wheat, bushels .. | Sorghum and honey Firewood or coal .... Rental value of house . Totals .2.. of 38 farms in Scioto County Quantify Country consumed value 872 $61.04 246 2.46 63 25.20 50.80 51.60 28.06 61.88 4.80 26.00 4.40 6.78 7.08 5.25 4.385 1409 20.00 8 6.25 416 8.25 3.50 6.00 2.73 26.43 ~ 144.00 ‘$578.50 - City value $113.36 12.30 63.00 63.05 77.40 36,49 119.50 10.56 31.20 8.00 11.85 14.75 10.50 13.12 21.14 40.00 90 12.50 12.48 1 4, 52.86 447900 $1,203.97 from a distance of an intricate maze of bushes and trees, yet once inside the paths are so laid out that one can walk through easily and reach any plant without stepping from the walk. LARGE HOG LOss Ohio farmers annually lose ap- proximately $235,000 worth: of hogs on the way to market, according to estimates made by the department of rursl economics at the Ohio State University. LIGHTNING CAUSES FIRES Lightning, unaccompanied by rain, has been the chief cause of disast- rous forest fires in the far west this summer, according to the forest ser- United States Department of | MONEY TO: LOAN on Bismarck City Property Phone 220-W City Insurance Agehey Bismarck, North Daketa Representing Exton @ Eaton Financial Correspondents +The aera: ae City Nutional Bank Bulldiag Senator Walsh, who said Senator | expecially inv eflin recently had made a state- | Junior League. ment of an “unreliable character” in D gnine dnitermediite the senate regarding the attitude of | worth Le the Knights of Columbus. When the| 7:30 evening worship. The pastor reading of the letter was concluded, | will preach the nd or the ee Senator Heflin jumped to his feet] of sermons on “Masterpieces in Art and declared the letter and the re-| The picture for consideration will be | marks of the Montana senator con-| “The Sistine Madonna” by Raphi stituted an attack on him. large print of this wonderful p' “I denounce that statement as un-| will be on exhibit throughout the) Mt; wand ts athor of it ive og service, The Young People's Choir, | in, “and the ai e will sing the anthem, “Lead Me to) Sunday services ge was false when he made it.” the Rock,” by Scott, ‘and the Men’s| Hie anieros rtiyreq Mere The outbreak was muffled soon! Quartet will sin pecial. number.| Ela Breljen Supt. Classes toe alle | FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH afterward by invoking the senate] Byangelistic song service Will be ve | . ae ees i ourship | Cofner Seventh Street and Ave. D rules against debate of a subject not| py We J. Noggle, a vc MoRning, ane Rev. A. J. Malmquist, pastor. officially before the senate. If you have no other church home| Zeal of the Lord|, Sunday School 9:45 a. m. Clarence Both Heflin and Senator Gillett,| jn the city, we hes bre gale a Larsen, superintendent. “ Sunday evening at 7:30 a religious Republictan, Massachusetts, an-| vorship with us. nounced they would speak at length | jy waleeee. program will be, rendered in the church under the’ on the Mexican-Nicaraguan situation | | poultryman has considerable leeway as long as he gets the hens to eat the right kind of feeds in the right pro-| portion. It is not important that part of the feed be fed ground, and recent investigational work at the Ohio ex- periment station indicates that it is possible to feed laying hens nothing but mash with favorable results. For instance, at the Kentucky experiment station they fed hens on a ration of whole yellow corn and all the skim milk the hens would drink; in faet, | no water was supplied. The hens also had access to grit and oyster shell. On that simple ration the hens laid remarkably well. The milk supplied ary protein to balance the but to insure their drinking a sufficient quantity they werg not al- lowed access to water. Cor. Fourth St. & Ave. C. Sunday services at 11:00 . m. | Subject: “Life.’ Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. | Wednesday evening t jonial meeting at 8 o'clock. A reading room is open in the church building every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, ex- cept legal holidays, from 2 to 4 p. m. ; All are welcome to attend these Fourth street and Avene a. services and to visit the reading V. Richert, Pastor. toon: could not grow in San Diego. Among! his 305 varieties of plants, 32 va- rieties of fruit and 53 varieties of | roses, he has the following: A rose bush with three different colors of roses; a yellow calla lily; a Chinese gooseberry, new in the United States and excellent as a sirup base; a Tahiti lime; an orchid flower Rowing on a tree called the Bahim a coral tree; a pista- chie nut tree and the sweetest nut in the world—the Macedonian nut from New Zealand. Strausser has traveled around the! world in search of plants for his garden. On one trip he brought) back a Tahiti lime, which grows larger fruit than Amefican lemons. Almost hidden on the side of the hill are two little-known trees—the Custard apple and the Ju-Jube, a v age of the 18th | Am less American- and Ep-| is id-week service on Wednesday at p.m, A cordial welcome is extended to If you will investigate, you will attend this re- liable old college. We have trained thousands of others for the better business and bank posi- tions. . LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Send for free catalog “The y invite you to) for His Church rangers especisl- ¢ pastor will conguct Driscoll in the English! G. M. LANGUM, later today. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH News Bulletins Athens, Jan. 15—(AP)—Five British cruisers, now in Haleron Bay, today were ordered to pro- ceed to China immediately. Managua, Jan. 15—(AP)—The Pan-American planes San An- tonio, San Francisco and Detroit arrived here today from Amapala, Honduras, and landed safely on Lake Managua. New York, Jan. 15—(AP)—The ‘Commercial Cable company today was advised that communication with Hankow has been cut off by the interruption of all lines on the Yangtze river beyond Kiu- kiang. London, Jan. — 15—(AP)—A Reuter dispatch from Warsaw says that a number of commun- ists have been arrested in vari- ous districts of Poland as a re- sult of a recent discovery of plots against the government. Three members of the diet were among those Arrested. ington, Jan. 15—(AP)—A eat order directing transfer to the senate of the ballots cast in Fe etehie in the Pennsylvania lal election last Novem- ber ber will a a by the senate cameslen ind committee, which onsiderd the election con- teed brought by William B. Wil- the Democratic nominee, jst Senator-elect William 8. Yare. Influenza Epidemic Has Reached Its Péak Geneva, Switzerland, Jan. 15.—() | ~—Health eg oe on the staff of the e. Europe's ag epidemic has reached its rts to the league show that a pravaleee in, the 12 League of Nations be! “the isease is countries of France, Spain, Scotland, lorway,. Poland, Rumani Jugo ‘ia, .G: pet. Balearie. Ear » the xieo, Jan. 15.—()— Mexico, ico, Jan. 9 the Bh eae 5. toed rie St ris ine Bible hour. Corner of Fourth St C. A. Stephens, 10:30 morning _ wo! mon: “Is Prohibition a Flos “Jesus Proves His Son- 1 cordially welcome ,to our ser- & CHARITY Junior B, Adult Bible | 7:30 evening — w “will This Body Liv Wednesday ing, subject, J. B. naa pastor. id 16th Street (South). every Sunday at 10:30 ron request. ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL Rev. F. H. Davenport, Rector. 514 Mandan Ave. Second Sunday after Epiphany. a, m. Holy Communion, a.m, Chureh school. it: 60 p.m. s and sermon. The Rector will preach on “Right a rong Thinking About God.” Wednesday, 7:30 p. m., choir prac- followed by Crusade Prayer at 5. sday, 3p. m. Woman's Guild Vocal Duct by the Nelson | meets at the home of Mrs, Hunter, 414 Eighth street. ‘From Sales to Song.’ fhe home of M street. The B. ¥. P. U. will serve a supper at the church Friday evening at 6:30, EVANGELICAL CHURCH nth and Ro ser Sts, Sea 904 Fourth | £10 a.m. | Sermon subject: “Transformed by| s¢ Beholdi Special sisters, Evening service (Eng- | 4 | auspices of the | Luther League, aided by the church choir. All are’ welcome. The annual business meeting of the | church will be held in the church par- | lors next Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock, ‘ AH members eligible to vote are kind- ly asked to be present. The catechumans meet next Wed- nesday at 4 o'clock p. m. at the par- sonage. The Birthday Mission’ Society will meet next Thursday evening at the home of Mr. Hjalmar Nelson, 302 Fifteenth street, Mrs. Nelson hostess. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Thayer and 2nd Strect Paul S. Wright. Morning worship at 10:30 a, m. Rev. Paul S, Wright will preach a sermon on “The Necessity for Redemption. Mrs. G. E. Wingreene and Mrs. F. J. Bavendick will sing a duet, “He Shall Feed His Flock.” * ‘Sunday school at 12 o'clock noon. Evening worship at 7:30 p, m. The sermon subject will be “Christians Must Help.” A male quartet com- posed of Fred Hanson, Paul S. Wright, Roy Indseth and George Humphreys will sing. CANADIAN SETTLERS It is estimated tnat more than 4,000 newcomers have taken up farming in central and northern Alberta, Cana- da, during the past season. Most of these settlers have Come from the United States and the British Isles. One ¢: conceive that it fruit from China used by confection- mpossible to duplicate these ions on the farm, so that per. haps a ration containing mash shoul ke fed. On the other hand, Ohio re ports as satisfactory results from| feeding nothing but mash, and sug- gests the advantages of this system, | such as cleanliness and simplicity of; routine, as well as being able to sup-/ ply, the feeds in exactly the right | proportions. Prices a Feed Factor | With this wide range of methods,| let us consider this particular case yith wheat at present prices, it would not be advisable to incMide it in the ration. Tt would be far better to sell the wheat and purchase bran und shorts. One should not over- Jook the question of price in select- ing a ration. As to the other grains, the choice would be governed iauaad | largely by their cost. It would not be wise to feed the| soy beans or cow peas as whole grain, for chickens do not relish them in that form. If they ure to be used, it would be best to grind and mix in a mash. In fact, it is difficult to con- ceive how anyone could easily di pense with the feeding of mash, except under the unusual conditions of the Kentucky experiments. Suggests a Good Mash As for ‘scratch food,;two-thirds should consist of yellow corn, the balance being oats, kafir or milo. For one hundred hens, fifteen pou should be the daily. allowance, fee ing about five pound: the morning, and ten pounds, or. all the hens will at, at night. In addition, a mash of some arm, should be kept bef ers. The garden has the appearance MORE EGG PRODUCTION Poultry, demonstration farms in Ohio have increased their average production from 97 eges for the nine months in 1923 to.111. eggs per’ hen for the first nine months of this poultry year. birds all the time. A good ma: this purpose would be: Bran, 26: ores 26; cornmeal, 26; salt, BP see rer compen agrees ot id to the sylvania and U. for them. in . —Payments vo small that you meet cate conven! We offer you the finest fires ‘in all AnatbnPeone » Tires-—any ,8ize, and you' can’ pay Easy Payments hatdly’’ This a Dlaey by which You ean ride ote no .equal—and: payments are so smal sia tia fou hardy be tion reaching 76,523 i bpen surpasscd’Sy : amethe pil efine- ‘go eek 7s anaes oe NB, Sail sits i meh cre ai na record- ‘Business DPrE do oe est sense, ray orey test renee, this huge J, -. pratt ci by Generel tihemtature tad detec 3 # senaie Sindee eng> * iota ig mi ihe ete lead ao: the" un. tenction of nd Sixes

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