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Sm ary oma. een Ce i fe i er ear eCBgonerore ss amos avetes SPTRI@e2ycecere ~ S08 225,ce4n0 " PAGE TEN THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE " SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1928 RAIN I$ AID TO CROPS OVER NORTH DAKOTA General Prospects Called Good} With Exception of Winter Rye SOME FIELDS REPLOWED; Moisture Helps Grain in Ca alier Pembina | « « Counties and Agricultural pr: Dakota have been shower: made to No high winds ¢ the state r the week 2. This a j benefited bh pointed out. General cr espects were gor ‘eption of winter ry Some farmer Ids plan to rye he dry season ha hindered germinaticn of the seed substituted for rye, the reports sand. Seeding is completed, except. for some corn planting in scattered se tions, Rainfall during the week wa heneficial to crops in C " and! Pembina count cc iz to re-| ports made L. Miller. The| rainfall was enough to give the soil a soaking to a depth of three or four | inches. | Temperatures Favorable | Temperatures in that section were | favorable to crops during the last} week, the report said. Posture con- | ditions are improving and livestock | is in good condition as a result. | “Prospects are better than aver: age,” Miller said. “A few fie! were badly ‘blown’ and would not; have amounted to much if we had not received rain. Some rye 1. at powea under. | sing 100 as normal, crops acre- | ages in Cavalier and Pembina coun ties were estimated as follow Wheat 90; oats 110; barley 11 110; flax 105; rye 75; tame 100. Agricultural prospects are good in central North Dakota, according to a report by H. Leutz, covering Burleigh, Dunn, Mercer, Oliver, M ton, Sheridan and McLean cour Wheat acreage in this district is es- timated at 110 of normal; oats 110; barley 110; rye 100; flax 110; corn 105, and tame grasses 110. Rye Is Light Rye in McKenze and Williams counties is exected to be light this ar, said T. 0. Charlson, of Ray, Wheat and other small grains bene- fited by the rainfalls during the last week, but in the sections that re- ceived no rainfall the farmers are! anxious. Pastures are in a fair condition and livestock is doing well in south- western North Dakota, said C. A. Seamander, Hettinger. Seeding in that section is completed, he said. The averages sown to the princi- pal grains are estimated by Seman- der as follows: Wheat 110; oats 110; barley 110; rye 80; flax 70; corn 110; and tame grasses 100. Two new store buildings and two new residences have been built at} Hettinger, he said. Lack of rainfall in south central North Dakota has held up the growth of_ crops considerably, cording to R. M. Rishworth, James- Indications are that the crop this year is about 50 to 80 per cent of the 1927 crop, h d. f Decisions of | Supreme Court o——_—_. ————__—_———9 Ermine Kilby, stockholder of the Movius Land & Loan company, a corporation, etc., Plaintiff and Respondent. vs. ‘The Movius Land & Loan Co., corporation, and A. L. Par- 8, as receiver of the Mo- vius Land & Loan company, ; Defendants and Appellant (1), It is incumbent upon | appellant to present a record show- error. (2) Under Section 7966, Com- jiled Laws of 1913, an action is med pending until its final deter-| mination upno appeal or until the time for appeal has passed, and where the record fails to show that a notice of entry of judgment had been served which would start the! limitation upon the time for appeal | running, under Section 7820, Com-| led Laws of 1913, the action will) deemed to have been pending in! the district court when subsequent | proceedings were had looking to-! ward an amendment or modification | of the judgment. pee panere a plaintiff fected | ent against some of a group! of defendants severally, but failed! to obtain judgment against another of such defendants, and where those only against whom the judgment ‘was obtained appealed therefrom, mo cross appeal having been taken by the plaintiff in which the suc- res} cessful defendant was made a DS dent "ae no fellce of entry | eee wing been served by Buel fendant upon the plaintiff, the disposition of the cause upon the appeal of some of the defendants, does not affect the rights of the ered as against a non-appealing lendant nor impart finalality to the eet as -between them. (Syllabus by the-court.) Appeal from the District Court turn to laugh. Jailed for an Editorial 1 to 10 days in of Lancaster, man i jail and fined $20 by Justice of the O., W. T. Lewis, editor of the Lan- by common pleas court on his request for a Lewis was fined and sentenced for contempt of azette editorial deploring the small fine imposed an assault and battery case. 1, in which he spent two hours, in the inset. Lewis is shown ith Justice Boerstier bY DAN THOMAS | Hollywood f., June 9.—For| the movie public has been laughing at buggies and automoblies rolling down the street with their wheels turning backward. Now it is the cinema industry’s From now on when uto or a wagon moves off down he street, the wheels will be turn- ing in the right direction. This . one of the most puzzling aced by celluloid experts, has the backward because spokes are not timed to the hun- turning s of individual pictures which comprise a film, Cameramen have In Hollywcod Y attempted to work out a method of timing their shutters but failed. Now that Nickolaus has disclosed his solution everybody is wondering why someone didn’t think of it long ago. “The process is very simple, con- sisting of painting a few of the spokes a more vivid color than the rest,” explains the discoverer. “Aft- er considerable experimenting, I learned that if some of the spokes were made to stand out above the others, their motion being over a greater space would be caught cor- rectly by the camera.” The new trick was first tried on the wheels of a truck. The wheels were painted in quadrants of dif- ferent shades. On larger wheels, such as buggy wheels, four sets of two spokes each are painted the dis- tinguishing color. of Richland County, Hon. George M. McKen Judge. Affirmed. Opinion of the court by Birdzell, Purcell & Heder, Wahpeton, N. D., attorneys for Appellants. M. Hildreth, Fargo, N. Dak. attorney for Respondent. The State of North Dakota, Appellant: vs. Isaak Diamond, Defendant and Respondent. 1. Section 2 of Chapter 222 of the Session Laws of 1917 being Sec- tion 9240 of the Supplement to the revised code of 1913 does not con- travene the provisions of the four- teenth amendment to the Constitu- tion of the United Sates by denying equal, protection of the law to the defendant or by making an arbi-| be trary classification. 2. Such statute does not contra- vene the provisions of Section 20 of the Constitution of this State, and is not subject to the charge that it grants “privileges or immunities” to certain persons, classes, businesses or occupations “which upon the same terms shall not be granted to all citi: so Appeal from the County Court of Ward County, North Dakota, Hon. Wm. Murray, Judge. Opinion of the court by Burr, Geo. F. Shafer, Attorney General, Bismarck, N. D., John Thope, special stant Attorney General, Minot, N. D., H_.E. Johnson, State’s At- torney of Ward County, N. D., B. A. Dickinson, Assistant State’s Attor- ney, of Ward County, N. D., Attor- neys for appellant. F. J. Funke, of Minot, N. D., at- J.|torney for defendant and respon- dent. Carol’s Wife to Have Secret Divorce Suit Bucharest, Rumania, June °—(?) —Princess Helen’s suit for divorce against her errant husband, former Crown Prince Carol of Rumania, will be heard in secret on June 21. Today’s official Gazette carried notice of the proceedings and in- vited Carol who was addressed as “Karl Karaiman” to attend the trial. Princess Helen, who is the moth- er of six year old King Michael, in her petition pleaded for the divorce cause of “profound affronts of- fered and desertion.” The petition also said Carol's present conduct is an offense to the royal court. Princess Helen and Carol were married in Athens in 1921. Four years later he eloped with Magda Lupescu to Paris. DE RIVERA’ BREAKS ENGAGE- MENT Madrid, June 9.—()—Premier Primo De Rivera has broken off his engagement to marry Mercedes Castelanos, says an official an- J.| nouncement issued late today. The Lister Institute of England is experimenting. with a number of guiena-pi to discover health salve of different varieties of ap- ples. How Will WITH OUR tions asked us. average family an average cost per month will family cooking. -Phone 727 Compare in Cost RATES is one of the many ques- will cost approximately ONE- FOURTH as much, for one cubic foot of natural gas does the work of two cubic feet of manufac- tured gas. In other words, the meals a day and have twenty- four hour automatic storage hot water service the year round at a month depending on how much hot water they use as $1 to $1.50 Consolidated Utilities Co. Natural Gas PRESENT GAS NATURAL GAS can cook three of from $3 to $5. do the average - 510 Broadway GALES OPENS DRY CAMPAIGN Calls Petition to Repeal State Prohibition Fraud and Forgery Lisbon, N. D., June 9.—(#)—The campaign to repeal the prohibition clause in the state constitution is not the result of popular demand but the result of a petition which is dishonest, Thomas W. Gales, Far- go, said in an address today. Gales is campaign manager of the North Dakota Day Constitution De- fenders who maintain their offices in Fargo. He shared with Governor A. G. Sorlie the speaking platform at a picnic of the Sons of Norway at Fort Ransom, near here. “The petition to repeal the pro- hibition clause in the constitution is filled with fraud and forgery,” he said. “The names of some persons were signed by other persons. “The proposition before us as a state is not an amendment to im- prove the enforcement laws, but a proposal to modify the laws. It is not even a suggestion to legalize the manufacture and sale of light wine and beer. The Wets in this state are after the whole thing. They want to repeal every law that keeps the saloon out, every restraint that holds the ‘blind pig’ and the bootlegger and moonshiner in check. Every county in the state has been organized by the dry forces for the coming election, he said. The work of organizing the districts has tepid done quietly and without pub- icity. County School Heads to Meet Here June 22 School board officers of Burleigh county will come to Bismarck June 22 for the annual June meeting, ac- cording to Miss Madge Runey, county superintendent who is in charge. Supt. A. E. Thompson, state pres- is ident of the Parent and Teachers association, will be one of the speak- ers on the speaker, not yet announced, will ad- dress the group on the “fresh air” tuberculosis camp which is being planned at Dawson. W. E. Parsons, They Made Australia and America Neighbors On much the same route as the tragic Dole flight of last summer—only longer—four flyers in the giant tri- motored monoplane Southern Cross have hewn another niche on the rock of fame by hopping from Oak- land, Cal., to Brisbane, Australia. They flew 7,300 miles, almost entirely ovev waters devoid of ships and is- lands, to become the Lindberghs of the Pacific. Captain Charles Kingsford-Smith, head of the expedition, shown above (center) with. Captain Harry W. Lyons, Jr., (right) and Charles T. O. Ulm, pilot (left). Kingsford-Smith and Ulm are Australians, while Lyons and the fourth member of, the party, James Warner, are Americans. deputy state superintendent, will|board in the county will attend the speak to the group about library | meeting. and text books. Other speakers} R. P. Bliss, McKenzie, is president will be secured. of the county organization, Mrs. About 150 officers are expected|Nellie G. Evarts, Bismarck, secre- for the meeting. The president,/tary, and Edgar Mount, Crofte two directors, and the clerk of each | district, vice pi program. Another HITCH RIDERS | SBT A RECORD College Students Travel from Grand Forks Here in 18 Hours Hitch riding is easy on North Da- kota highways. Hitch riders don’t burn any gaso- line, but they “get there just the same.” Two Bismarck students IS hours by the itch riding Tt Sydney Register, "Shoperd: will be captala: of he, North Dakota foot ball team next fall. He made « record ‘n cam) basketball this year. Register showed promise as @ distance sprinter until illness forced him to leave off athletics. Shepard leaves soon for Minne- apolis to enter the Fort Snelling reserve officers training camp. FORT RIPLEY TOUR PLANNED St. Paul, June 9.—(AP)—Motor cars will substitute for covered ns _ when the Minnesota His- ical Society conducts its annual “historic” tour vver paved roads once mere cart trails, Wednesday and Bd June 13 and 14. on Heit it in the Middle ernmos' post tl West, and an Indi.n reservation trading ‘post where Redskins will reconstruct an Indian scene of two cent ago, will be the sites of ie eg tect dine El E sol ai cannon, controlled of the (pagal he ters in its active lays. zi WHIPPET FOUR SEDAN ‘ol0 eter (2-pass.) $485; Roadster (with Fumble seat) 6525; Coach $535; ‘Coupe (with Coupe $835; Cabriolet collapsible top) $595, IMPORTANT NOTICE! U. S. AUTO TAX REPEALED BUY NOW at Lower Prices! J T.. Whippet 4-cylinder Sedan is the world’s lowest-priced 4-door enclosed car. No other manufac- turer has been able to produce a 4- door Sedan at such low cost. 9 The last word in high quality and modern design and the newest thing ‘in style, this smart, colorful, roomy Sedan is tremendously popular everywhere. @Its liveliness, its speed, its smoothness and its remarkable economy are a revel- ation. Of course it is equipped with ap- proved 4-wheel brakes for utmost safety. et Wi ,_ TT, WORLD'S LOWEST PRICED SIX SEDAN mae \ Record-breaking sales attest the public’s marked preference for Whippet values. The first five months of 1928 were by far the greatest in Willys-Overland sales were 14% above April, vious month. Demand continues at the pose pe gps nog onstration then will you truly realize its great-value.| the Kighect wont Only, a ¢ *