The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 17, 1927, Page 7

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\ ii { | i FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1927 WALL WAR ON pARBERRY IN _GRAINSTATES Decade of Fighting Will) Reach Climax: This Sum- mer, U.S.D.A. Plans | Washington, June 17—(AP)—A decade of warfare against black| stem rust in 13 great grain states of the’ upper Mi ppi valley will reach its climax this summer. The United States department of i fale will send 225 men into that area soon to locate and destroy, the common barberry, host plant of “the grain grower’s worst enemy.” 40 to Cooperate More than 40 state agents are expr to cooperate with the fed- erai ‘perts, the combined force off its service in searchin the Tarmer’s yards, wasteland, an woodlots for the outlaw growth. “This work,” department offi- cials say, “ will. be of tremendous importance to the entire nation. Barberry eradication has reduced stem-rust losses from an average of 50,419,000 bushels of grain for the 6-year dent 1915 to 1920, to 15,920,000 bushels for the period 1921-1926. Spores of the minute fungus before attacking grain in the: ipring, breed only on leaves and other tender parts of the com- mon barberry. Before the dreaded plant disease can be eradicated, its life cycle must be broken by barberry ex- termination. The individual farm- er can do his best work toward such an end by directing these men to suspected harmful bushes. | All in honor cf one young man, this splendid spectacle! in view, returning via Washington ing toward the Battery—the lower bergh was aboard it at the time. spraying its greeting. Water’s Tribute to Airman It’s a marv to the city from which he starte Manhattan waterfront—is the Ma- In the background is the Statue of Below the fireboat is the Aquarium, famous New York sight-seeing attraction. lines is a part of the tremendous crowd awaiting to pay “Lindy” a tribute unexampled in the THE: BISMARCK TRIBUNE clous view of New York harbor as Catonel Charles A. Lindbergh hove d his epic flight to Paris. @ye of the innumerable boats shown steam- com, official “welcoming boat” cf the eity of New York, and Lind- Libert city’s annals of welcome. H. M. CREEL TELLS HOW NORTH DAKOTA, a ae +n ka deer tiring me at my request is pertinent, and needs no explanation of the du-| ciate ties of this office at this time and{ alwayd, with At the right center, just off the Battery, is a fireboat | Held firmly in check by police | the Cfty of Devils Lake will appre- | he beautiful park that will now | all its scenic beauties, | . PAGE SEVEN is true in possibility rather than}of their daughters become available} 67 oranges, 52 bananas and 15 lem- | probability. lis on | “As a matter of fact,” he con-/the dairy world tod |tinues, “it's the number of individu owners and not the cows that is says. i a Stability | Vanninghert Gare TUBE j mm errrrersiite) The movement is to-| About fiv a higher grade cow, and high| cut each year tom production herds are, asa rule, in) and telegraph lin creased. - | Is ‘Biggest Industry’ Newspapers of America use about | “Dairying is the biggest Amer-| three million tons of pulp wood every jean farm industry. The prime is-| year. sue now is economy in production. |The fact that the amount of milk |cow produces and its quality are jthe greatest factors in economy has Hed to the gen better herd. hit? ex Last year each individual in Eng-| and could have consumed 93 apples | | pupa jas much time, eed for a cow that produces only 4,500 pounds jof milk a year us for one that pro- i nount. t may cost more quality cow, true the increased pro- a is high in Larson calls attention to the wor of cow-testing organizations. t has been found that the 360,000 a edited cows produce as much milk as 584 rdinary cows, and profit as 640,000 average cows, | Purebreda Necessa Better bred cow | of the d. j de ding problem j | i bulls sire daughters that | | produce better than other dams. If. | five or more daughters of one. bull | record higher production than their dams, the sire is placed on the ac- ited list. In the whole nation | there are now but proved bulls. | Where to find such keep them until the production records the dairy | Prov THIS MONTH 1 how administered. be a striking contrast to the vast Since inception of the crusade CAME INTO POSSESSION OF NATIONA| “II. In the promotion and re- | prarie lands surrounding the city, and | 1918, the government and allied tirement of Major General H, M. | the great commercial value to the | t be (Bf interests have destroyed 14,983,000 | Creel T desire to attest to the [eity when encampments are held] QUGR wromn. Ii common barberry bushes in Colo- GUARD SIT 2 | faithful and highly efficient ser- ea gece borg laid ou ‘NE rado, Mlinois, Indiana, Towa. Mich- rendered by him during his ae | : \AIB iger. Minnesota, Montana, Nebras- ———_—_——_- | TS SWE ORME ntae iain cater Here’s a brilliant fox-trot with a ka. North Dakota, Ohio, South Da-| Land Originally Surveyed For | AIL coon decladas weed! sists | refrain that carries the spicy flavor | i kota, Wisconsin and Wyoming. { le Secteta Wa tha | of Parisian boulevards. Here and Honorable Secretary of War that t Pibpede ‘Ta: lial Fort Totten Military Res- | the efficiency of the National? | | there throughout the melody, you | ~ } recess Is Simpl ervation—Later Ceded to! Guard of this state was at such catch the stirring notes of the 1, Had as nig lene Ten a low ebb that the state was not | x | Marseillaise. An unusual number } ounds of crushed rock salt or a entitled to the appropriation from | | Se ea | ration of kerosene, applied to the) State For Encampment the federal government under the ‘HAS IMPORTANT crowded with bizarre effects. We | cl f the pl: ill ki bar- le act of Januai , 1903. Only ‘al | will gladly play you all of these new y peers ane pant avill killa: Grounds and Other Public few months el. befo: . Victor Records. C in—today! ye in diameter. ses | bathed by Gene Grealétacthe | ME Colnmon barberry is an erect gotent: at the secrelany Ge Wat | Fifty Million Frenchmen shrub which may be found grow-| . (By Major General H. M, Creel) rescinded his adverse | decision. t = | Can't Be W I} inv as » seedling a few inches| ‘tn {9x0 acting engineer officer tor General continued along ; Cant Wrong | high or as a bush up to 12 feet in| Fort Totten District, | surveyed these lines and brought the | UJ, §, Dairy Chief Estimates) Fox Trot With Vocal Refraie BH height. Scientists urge that it| Devils Lake, also’ made a topograpical | iuard to that state of efficiency : ; Nar SHIverer | ME not be confused with the short| survey Totten Military ngauinelted Tieutenant, Col- | Value of Products as Over Iga utes oe eee cApan bi ry whi vi reservation, Sherman visited one! cs oge, Tek 2 g seas just the Same—Fox Trot { | arg ge brsireabdindraere aes Fort nee in the same summer and | PBs | | Two Billions Rocer WoLre KAHN after ins,Veting the north shore oi . 5 4 tayerebie to rust, one bashes the lake with reference to map of | to report ‘ % AND His ORCHESTRA sh may be responsible for de-| same told me to recommend a mili-| ) 0 Secretary of ~ | Waghin: i No. 20634, 10-inch yelenment of 92 quadrillion, 736 tary, wood ig ea rou d | Woe that ya oe per cong o! ie oi we ; | Side by Side—Fox Trot d rillion’ spores. supply Fort Totten with fuel for 20) National Guard o: is state | chief, t a -—Fo: : “Due to the late season,” author-| years. Pursuant. to. these instruc: could be placed immediately on | dairy. industry and he'll push ‘| With Vocal Refrain they Besge etna tel Hoel seconded eroumeos : me r an equal footing with the regu- | his desk this group of figure bine ities advise, “much wait Sy o net Tecamanpelen Nee wood xenon. MAJOR GENERAL CREEL lar army in the field for active Fout-and uw halt’ million farms. in] Pretty Lips—Fox Trot . : ; done to protect the spring wheat - 2 e h h ay iy With Vocal Refrain ‘ 4B ‘crop. Numerous spores have been| end of Grabain's Island and two miles | repricy service, thus giving to the Na- | America have dairy cattle. if Face Waren ex : Wg north on Rock Island, which lies im- | * tional Guard of this state a posi- | T otal number of cows approxi- ‘AUL ITEMAN slowsg:o develop and all barberty| mediately south of city of Dev . Johnson succeded in passing it in| tion seldom attained by the Guard | mates thirty. million, avp His ORCHESTRA ncredsé uyin er bushe: found now should be cut| rake, distant some six miles, | the House, when he wired me of his} of any other state. . j The annual farm value of | No. 206z/, 10-inch immediately and burned, and salt} “When Fort Totten was abandoned, | final success, and this state became _ Major General H, M. Creel, re- | products is 50,000,000 : ! : . . im applied to the roots. Infected] this military reservation on Rock Is-|the owner of one of the finest na-| tired, was a cadet in the U.S. | Population in the United States," Hello Cutie—Fox Trot Bothen, araoanily ccatectal, Twat) and eurereLcatierethe ee tie | teal eee cen es | acageny 1873 to 1877; | potential source of milk consumption] “gen teed Reprate or your tire elus ” appear on the un-|ber became public domain, disposal; state parks in the additional nd Lieutenant | increase, rises at the rate of 1,750,- . ‘ of cluster cups” appe: he { . S —-Fox Trot I der side of the leaves, orange in| subject to discretion of the President.| In connection with the above it is Fighth U. S. Cavalry June 15, | 600 per yea 4 “ , any MM color, and ranging in size from a| This tract syne two and one-third | appropriate: perhaps to add that as| 1877, to September 30, 1877; pro- . 837 Testing Groups : With Vocal Refrain és 1 pinhead ts tad as large as a slits fase and erent by cme miles at | pes net of oe Hints Mules ttl Wee Geely Rete ere ideas are ay baat fe aw testing Horace min evoke t] 4 south eastern point north and south, | jad immediate charge of these . S. Cava Sey er 30, 1877; associations i he United States, TRA penny. ‘containing, some 1,800 acres of val-| grounds for years but never received| resigned July, 1882; in’ Dull | with an enrolled total of 360,000 Yo. 2060: i f Money Value Great d uable nber, with large accretions | one. cent to iaprera then. g al Maite Scampean saree ine: Mg ouch producing: an age No. 20608, 10-inch | i >| Une ian ts, ti r a |. A. W ¥ ¢ ‘a + 3 r o poun of mi annu; . Sen d by black an rust from | Legislature Acts the timber on it, although the fuel] to 1882; Inspector and Judge Ad- | Larson, “that if every cow in the| You Won't See Me, If I See | Seine 1988, inclusive,’ at $638,-|, 4 banker in Devils Lake proposed | supply for Fort Totten had been tak-| vocate General, with rank of j nation’ produced as much milk a You (The Whispering i i ” ft the loss| 2 me that we accept the proposition en off this immediate plot, it being] Colonel, North Dakota National jthe accredited cattle, the Un Baritone) Jack Suita 687,456. Arrayed against the loss! of a capitalist of Minneapolis, have| nearer to the Fort thay any other} Guard, April 2, 1891; | Adjutant ‘utes would not need even one a is a congressional sud Bodaet this abandoned reservation surveyed, part of the reservation. 1 made 153 General ie 29, Bly i A tional dairy cow for a quarter of | No. 20626, 10-inch f $375,000 per year and cash ap-| into 40-acre tracts and sold at pub-| tri d. * in years to come, the national)/a century.” ‘ . | roping or’ ele, aautpalont:| its anciiocn, ke anid tiectih tes | Cae cra aromas whos ehacge,| in Yeure, io came, the sationel igus ganelasion is, purely a scien,| Sometimes I'm Happy a state and other cooperative} money to buy all of it, and we three | state which was improperly placed in| ¥alue of this magnificent grant and tific one, Dr. Larson expl (from Hit the Deck) With Piano | ¥ 1 agencies, totaling almost $100,000) were to divide equally the net prof-|the general fund and used for other Louise Groopy-CHARLEs KING 5 annually. In North Dakota, where| it# when we sold it. I told the bank-| purposes than what it should been, | Hallelujah! (from Hit the Deck) | the bapherry, bale was iat | fiat Wh‘veauul tat of tbe |Gs'wte Mereed eatetiae eet] ickest Hot Breakfasts! **2iete, 0" tue Revsans | - a arr pralect an ian tying on the lake shore was the great-| while wood was at this time very: or UIC. t Oo reakyasts. | No. 20609, 10-inch | * josses jocal asset of our city, I immed-| cheap selling for $2 per cord from | in 1916 to 1,373,000 busituls els in 1926. MIGHT HAVE BEEN KING | Berden, England—If William, Duke of Normandy, had been defeat- I cd by King Harold at JMB) 1066, Thomas Goodwin, En, HH er, might have been king of the em- jE pire today. But Goodwin, lineal de- | acendant of Harold’s father, says he iately went to Bismarck where the legislature was in session and there drew up a joint memorial to Congret asking that this tract be ceded to State of North Dakota for e campment grounds of the state na- tional guard, park purposes and other public purposes not inconsistent therewith. Senator Horace Arnold of Grand Forks county introduced it, it passed ‘immediately without opposition, Sen- ator Hansbrough passed it at sessions of Congress before Hon, the Indian Reservation and Turtle Mountains. In 1890 the Legislature abolished the National Guard of this state, in 1891 I went to Bismarck, employed a stenographer, and drew uw) pas revised military introduced in the Leg it passed without opposition and the state once more had a national guard, After many years as inspector and judge advocate génerat;.1 was made two| adjutant generat; and-the following M.| extract from the. executive order re- Hoskins-Meyer The Home of KFYR Pe does not xegret that history has ) taken the course it has, ‘0 DIG UP FIRST CITY chivegor Kish, the first city built after the Leo, tae me aeelores ary VULCANIZING from Englan . . . ory | e 3 Phone 944 Semitic people of the oldest order. 7 1 city of the ancient (By James W. Foley) FY Tingddm has been Yound beneath the|I guess he must be awful old; we had him of and years, : Hiemancl: Accrscery & THE RELIABLE TIRE : ruins of a Babylonian temple. And he’s so old the ends were worn all off of both his ears. | . He couldn’t hardly eat, because his teeth were all worn out, And all his legs got stiff, so he could hardly drag about. “ one day Lid hy geen by ie, ey Fiehy near oh cella door, P ...,{ And gasped an 8) for. ath, uni couldn’t any more; 1 was born. in1906" or 1906 snd ‘my| So I went out and patted him, and when he heard me colt name is Clarence George Cox or|He looked at me and wagged his tail, which died the last of all. George Clarence Cox.” That is the Next to First Guaranty Bank FORGOT HIS NAME okay. Kane—Dear sir: Will ane sen look up my birth record. AT LOW PRICES It will pay you to compare Fisk Premier Tires with all others at the same price. Faster than toast! _ That rich and creamy QUAKER flavor. Cook in 2% to 5 minutes. | Demand the genuine. | =: | SE AAT, DR. R. S. ENGE letter that reached the secretary of My! he was black and curly once, when he was new and young, Chireneacier Shrewd tire buyers can tell you that for vital statistics recently. | An would open up his, mouth at us and curl his tongue, Examinat! Free liable val the I { sas did not register births until 1911,| Just like he laughed, and played with us: and he wala we, Treliable value at the Jowest prices you mo Cox may sever leare bls nam creek, and eine our ey us, or anything fee hae ne Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. D and age. ’ GOT HIS CHANCE - Boston, Mass.—Twenty-two years cannot beat Fisk Premiers, all sizes and types—balloon and high pressure. FISK BALLOON CORDS For Comfort, Safety, Mileage FISK EXTRA HEAVY BALLOONS Super Tires for Super Service In winter we would hitch him up, and he would haul our sled, And walk or trot, or run with it, or anything we said; So when he wagged his tail at me I laid him right beside . P, McCarthy lett high school|‘The cellar door, and then I went behind the barn and cried. went to work in the stock ex- bs . chang) as a messenger, | When he/ He was a friend of all the boys, and when they came to play faformed “hat Philip <a Wen? ead | He'd wag’his tail and bark and {ook at them the smartest way; And he'd pretend to bite at them and nip their pants, but he Cat te him AWB aaetee ae Would never bite, cause he was just as Kind as he could be: Boston Exchange. And Henry Watson looked at him beside the cellar door, And said, “He'll never haul us boys on our sled any more.” +g ,PERSONAL INSTRUCTION He, turned his ears back straight and nice; he liked him awful well; SOE He Onp..of 8 eae Because he' had tears in his eyes, and then a big one fell. fi roperiion. to. tbe number while we got 2 8] and Billy Gibson came, Pans oe Marie Maetars Tommy Dean and ae ‘Brink, pad they all felt the same,’ —oo “Qne Sniff—DEAD” Bues Brearue Brack Fiac—and diel Tt gets every fly, mosquito and ant in your home. Kills other bugs, . ago, and Capital Funeral ' . Parlors 216 Main Ave. Licensed Embalmer Phone Day or Night—22-W Jos. W. Tschumperiin Prop. 4 Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. ; 50 A Bismarck, North Dakota month and teaches K pupil er rural school near here.|\We om Acree turf un in the yard, right underneath a tree, ‘Bien her plctare was printed mot | And laid hi in ond left him. there, all covered carefully; Connolly Motor Com Tecal per she rec h ana in for al us, for ‘ proposals of marriage, i | : and couldn't eat, we boys all liked him pos 0. pany. » he didn’t think the Lord would really care If we boys sang s hymn for him and said a little prayer, said he thought.” rather. not, A red ¢FIS * A GOOD SPORT ate Reet going to catch i id ‘wom! initor at, int ule’ lake,” Srienda, seofting her for s boat ride around the aioe pesiently aie ae tt, And soe cast. Finally, dis- ‘couraged, she hauled in her line, nie ‘And Ai

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