The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 17, 1927, Page 10

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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1927 | ium and any basketball players in! and Mrs. P. A. Iverson of James- Y the city not affiliated with any/town. other team are invited to attend. PAGE TEN; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “p BURLEIGH (0. CHANGE IN TARIFF WOULD HARM MORE PHANTOMS ARE K YOUTHS ENJOY | TEN AD BARNES, SRDINE BELIEVES’ BOOKING GAMES pations this week of Neil Churchill, pad ebony fe elected during the manager of the Bismarck - Phan- january. toms, the only strictly independent Lied who apt! for the fey ive have te | rea ee Burd pissed Mid] Jamentowee Ne De Deo Ih —(AP) % = jamest DB, |. D., a | ‘he team in 4 years that dcagt, Hebert O'Hare Dave Cook,|—SWrs. Frank Guyot, 66, of Oakes,| been e George seein i, ras Roy D. ’ McLeod, Terrence| She is survived by-her husband, five|. M ae id, O. J. Baker, Mrs>\Frank day and Thursday ts at 7:30| land, Mra..O. J. Baker, the ensuing’ sea;|erclock in the high 8d club has Harry Lobach,|N. D., died at a local hospital here Local Independent: Cage Quint sai, | Gorden last daughters and two sons who were . yecebion ey with her ‘at the time of her death. — if Oakes,} Dakota, Booking basketball games with] elected manager of the ensuing sea- ool gymnas-| Karas, Miss Grace Guyott 0! | the indapettiont outfits of the Miss-, ae and Bruce Murphy was nemed Art Haas, ht. Burial will be at Oakes. Has Large Squad Out— les ra ization meeting| . Practices will be held each Tues-|The daughters are Mrs. Ludvig Bu-} d resentation and Enter Ex- of Agriculture Says in hibits Next Year Speech ouri Slope is one of the secrefary-treasurer. r officers Florence McNeill, outstanding ma aie eG 17.—P)—A 5 ‘ slothing| change in the American protective a grtoes, athe Rakin dices ‘ig | carve would harm the farmer more club, and Alton Johnson, m °"|than it would aid him, W. M. Jar- the Sterling Pig club, who, have gine, secretary of agriculture, told hw been representing the boys’ and) the Republican club today. du girls’ clubs of Burleigh county at) “ihe time is approaching,” he tw the annual state institute which was|.4ig, “when tariff protection. will se] held in Fargo at the North Dakota/be more important to agriculture in 8ricultural college the past week, than to industry in this countt -, m will return to their homes today. | since agriculture is becoming less, cu A. R. Miesen, county agricultural! and industry more, depeident on agent, who returned from Fargo! foreign markets.” K last night, reported that “this) Agricultural productions, he de- year’s institute was the biggest and| cared, have pcen for many years a pe best that had ever been held.” diminishing part of America’s ex- ie Never before has Burleigh coun-! ports, and agricultural exports are ted officially at the becoming a diminishing percentage y, State institute and in consequence! of the country's total domestic pro- be no active participation by the local! quction in agriculture. MY delegates took place, according to) Value of Farm Exports Increases Gl Mr, Miesen. The total vale of agricultural ex- The war in Kentucky over horse racing is not over. Attorney Gen- of : ihevexes i for the * : j en ; $ ) 7 >, Nex ports increased 122 per cent for h eral Fink E, Daugherty (above) 4 a eg ona ic ebiity Yer have iod 1900-1904 to the period 1922-| has filed suit to dissolve the Ken- = : oll pet 6, he said, while the value of alll tucky Jockey Club and forfeit its e it ll en- r 24 la ae Rehibie, ecconling ae Mic.|other exports increased 338 per| charter. The club, capitalized at nm 5 ret |cent., } $4,000,000, a powerful influence in 4 be aban hy a See haeieigh “Since agriculture ibs becoming | state politics, is violating state and # — county youths was that they did not less, and industry more, dependent national laws through operation of K have the chance to show the rest of 0" the foreign market,” said Secre-| the pari-mutuct betting system at the state the good work that is be-|t@ty Jardine, “it is becoming in-| its tracks at Louisville, Lexington, t¢ ing done here. creasingly important to be As Latonia and Chicago, Ill. The suit M “We feel sure that the livestock | that protection should be maintained! js an echo of the ‘recent election that is being raised by the boys'|##ainst foreign competition in our! when Judge Flem D. Sampson, Your Own Movies—at Home Your first skiing lesson—what a thrill at the time and what a laugh later for you and the folks when the Ciné-Kodak movies of it flash ‘ture’s favored region ’ naa? ES Anse kets. friend of racing, was elected gover- si and girls’ clubs in this county and|™4” ; inki a , 8 on your screen at home. ; A the grains and other products of| . 4S Silt Feels ‘would a H besides the i kk lf Nature plays favorites. Gold, oil, and rich soil % the clubs, can compete on a PriZe-lwreck our protective system in the And, es the movies you ma i Kod are not found everywhere. ¢ innin; sis with any o Se ‘ ; rs Autre a that were shown in Fargo and next ety ston'to thine fees pila ‘WIDE i] ARI ANGE with Ciné Kodak, - Lotenat show wi ar No, nor Eastern-grade coal. In fact, so far as year we will be out to make Bur-|yeaiy mean, Competition of for- scope projector any variety of professional sub- known, only in Northeast Pennsylvania has Nature “ $ leigh county known as the most! cign agricultural products in our j : includin; World deposited a bright hard coal—only in Western § progressive, agricultural county in| markets would be keenly felt by our IN ¢ AS PRICES jects—Kodak Cinegraphs (including the Worl Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, and Eastern . jesen 8. Ie y VOU ix ., H @ Tho Burleigh county delezateg are formar 2, erate aes pened ie ll BAY ig Sonat scier colvanel bei tatesureqeal dor © returning in company with the Mor-| that instability of commercial rela- — which you purchase outright or rent reasonably. ia a smokeless soft coal which have no eq ton county representation, all Un-/siong which drastic tariff chang-s|U. S. Survey Shows Prices "round quality. f der the chi f R. C. Newcomer, 7 e : ‘ Morton county agent. weAnother factor essential fo a fair| Range From 10 Cents a Gal- Ciné-Kodaks $70 up; ae on hulitacesieatsalicts K-Coal © intel ‘ satiiiaienyi appraisal of the tariff policy in its lon to 27 Cents $60 up; Speciat. Screens $10 up; furnished the Northwest with these incomparable YOUNG FOLKS ENTHUSIASTIC relation to agriculture, he saic, is ‘0 See Them Here ‘Today their in et in OVER RECEPTION AT FARGO | that the United States today is the ied S08 Ae De Cae been in| World’s largest free trade market./ Washington, D. C. Dec. 17— oung ) a he wi me fol dave t. | He pointed out that in this country | Gasoline prices in the United States Fargo for the past four days, at-|thore are no trade barriers -uch as range all the way from 10 cents a tending the annual Boys’ and Girls’ exist in Europe. q i ne = } 3 gallon to 27 cents for straight run Club Achievement Institute, which and from 13 cents a gallon to 29 facilities, handling 10,000,000 tons a year, totals $30,000,000. ‘This coal is distri to house- holders by 5,000 Retail Coal Dealers. Ask for Dock Coal Hoskins-Meyer Home of KFYR ended Friday, are going back to eran their homes througl.out the state keyed to a high pitch c* enthusiasm over the reception they received in cents for high test.gas. This wide variation in the price of gasoline throughout the country DOGK COAL COMPANIES BERWIND FUEL CO. M. A. HANNA COAL & DOCK CO, THE P. @A.COAL& DOCK CO. CARNEGIE DOCK & FUEL CO., ‘THE INLAND COAL & DOCK CO. PITTSBURGH COAL CO. THE CLARKSON COAL & DOCK CO. THE NORTHERN COAL & DOCKCO. THE C. REISS COAL CO. GREAT LAKES COAL & DOCK CO. NORTH WESTERN FUEL CO, ZENITH FURNACE CO. ‘ & a was revealed in a check-up by 950 py EE tha “wideapread. intarest motor clubs affiliated with the + shown in their livestock production American Automobile Association 1 work as reflected in the large at- and reported to national headquar- * tendance, and the exceptionally F A M ] LY DIES Th cheek) by the national mo- : toring body showed that on Novem- high prices paid at the auction Fri- day. This was the report of H. E. Rill- ing, state club leader, and Lee Fer- guson of Kensal, Stutsman county, the newly elected president of the Institute. : * _.“We who have been long in elub ; work are used to enthusiastic re- sponses from the boys and girls when they see their work appreciat- ed,” said Mr. Rilling. “But the i ~» wonderful support that was given i to our livestock sale yesterday brought an outburst of expressions of gratification from the boys and girls which surpassed anything I | have ever experienced. q “The business men and the vari- ous organizatins who bought that livestock yesterday at such splendid prices did one of the biggest things that has ever been done for boys’ and girls’ club work in the history of our work in this state.” Minneapolis Woman Corrected Papers For Fargo College Minneapolis, Dec. 17.—(AP)— Miss Irene Conley of this city, in- with seven officials of the Central Scientific college, Fargo, N. D., on charges of using the mails to defraud, corrected three papers for the seepiation and peeled $1 il ‘pa: mt for her services, she sai today. The indictment returned in Wash- sington charged that the college solic- ited pri tive students by mail and that the letters claimed diplomas. from the college would benefit the students. “The only connection I had with ce) was two hour's work I did for it about a year ago,” Miss Conley said. “I received a letter from the col- lege offering me a part time position 1S Manuscripts at 50 cents Richard, Youngest Son of New England Farmer, Succumbs to Encephalitis New England, N. D., Dec. 17.— Richard Boettcher, youngest son of Emil Boettcher, farmer living near here, is dead, the third member of his far enceph: a.m. Friday. to become a victim of is. The boy died at 9:30 His brother, Wayne, still is crit- ically ill, a sufferer of the same malady. Mrs. Boettcher and her daughter, Dorothy, died during the first week of this month. Their funerals were held Monday. Davis May Take Part in Army-Navy Break New York, Dec. 17.—(P)—Al- though expressing the hope that the naval and military academies may themselves settle their present ath- letic differences, Secretary of Wat Davis today indicated, in a state- ment issued through the army in- formation service, that he might take action in the situation later. While refraining “from any ex- pression until he knows more fully the reason why the Naval Academy desires to depart from its existing contract,” Secretary Davis pointed to the terms of the contract, which has three more years to run and contains no provisions limiting the eligibility of athletes, Annapolis, Maryland, Dec. 17.— (®)—The second bombshell in the Army-Navy football controversy was thrown today when Rear Ad- miral Louis M. Nulton, superintend- ent of the Naval Academy, an- nounced that the Naval Academy ber 22, gasoline was selling at 47 different prices, : In order to secure an accurate picture of the gasoline price range on a given day, identical forms were sent to every A. A. A. club through- out the country; the local clubs in turn checked the prices in their re- spective areas and returned the forms to Washington. The lowest price on the date of the check-up was 10 cents for straight run and 18 cents for high test gasoline, at Peoria, Ill., and the highest was 27 cents for straight run and 29 cents for high test, at hoenix, Arizona. Proximity to sources of supply appeared to be a negligible factor in determining current prices, says the A. A. A. since prices were in many instances, higher oil fields than they were at points to which a long haul was necessary. Prices at tidewater were on the whole higher than those charged at inland points. The average price at points along the Atlantic Seaboard on November 22, the date of the nation-wide check-up, was 22 cents a_ gallon. The average price in the Missis: i Valley region was 19 cents a gai- jor The average price on the Pa- cifie Coast. was 20 cents a gallon. One of the most striking features of the A. A. A. survey is its dis- closure of the rapidity with which prices change within small areas where basic conditions such as rent- als, supply and demand are the same days the A, A. A. statement: “On the West Coast of Florida, for instance, there was a range of prices var five cents in a dis- tance of 32 miles. Gasoline sold for 18 cents in Tampa, 20 cents in Plant City, 21 miles away, and for 23 cents at Lakeland, 11 miles from Plant City. Another instance, in Indiana, disclosed that straight run gasoline sold for 19.3 cents and high Make thes Christmas last for thous.nds of miles There’s a way to make this Christ- . mas Pe gr omer eng day for Nothing you could choose would give them greater happiness. ‘The liheret G. BE. &.C. sine poymant phen bs evaltetle Y desired ATWATER KE RADIO A-CHRISTMAS GIET That Will Bring Happiness to Your Home to Stay 41 ; ‘ correctin, 0 ' an hour. I wrote an acceptance and| contemplated taking no further] test gasoline for 22.3 cents, at Col- - heard nothing more for ‘several| steps toward an Army-Navy game] umbus, while it sold for 15.3 and P months. for 1928, 18.3 respectively, at Edinburg and three manuscripts were ——— Franklin, ten and twenty miles b 3 9 2 “Then / mailed to me. I corrected them and| More than four million copies of| away.” - i later received a check for $1 from|the song, “A Perfect Day,” have) The widest price range was in the school. I never heard from the| been sold. Illinois where the price of gas college after that.” ranged from 10 cents a gallon to : — 19 1-2 cents for straight run gaso- Fargo, N. D, Dec. 17.—(aP)—are.| $5000 Each For Dead | line and from 13 to 22 cents @ gal- W. ?. Wasson, Fargo, has just re- A lon for high test. Illinois has a two ein = tu from Washington, wheré she : Bandits cent gasoline tax and in this, as tes before a federal grand jury well as in other states where the which Friday indicted Ben Martin, price fluctuated widely from city to superintendent of schools at Deer- city and town to town, it was shown N. D., foi 1 Fargo, that the tax is negligible as a factor 4 : aye ; : ing, N. D., formerly of Fargo, and in the wide fluctuation of prices, Order \ Coal Now seven others on charges of conspir- NOMINATION CONFIRMED j : When. Other Coal Fails to Heat. acy to cant pit - ae mails, naming them as o! ls of the Cer tral Scientific college of Fargo. Washington, Dec. 17.—(?)—Henry Mrs. Wasson said today that her L. Stimson of New York was con- testimony before the grand jury was : firmed today by the senate as gov- separa the forwarding of mail ernor-general of the Philippines, reased to Martin in care of the & college, or to the college at 1416 ‘Third avenue north, Mrs. Wasson’s In Jamaica the young ladies cary nee shee on their bern wi ey go to a party, pul them on after they arrive. " of bell ba

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