The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 5, 1928, Page 6

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Cor © JARM BATTLE * TGOING AHEAD day protection from go’ that other group interests have is to endure. “Some have said that diversifica: tion is the solution. The beef grow- ers tried it. They turned four and a half millions of acres of range land into cotton crops and they depressed the price of cotton to a point where thousands of cotton farmers went broke. Diversification Not Remedy “You farmers in North Dakota tried it. You and other states in- creased the corn acrea half million acres in a vernment if it § 1OWAN ngressman Dickinson ‘Says ontest for Equality Is Only Well Begun and you suffered with your fowa ar ey and et neighber by reason of . xy {depressed prices. SUE OF CAMPAIGN) “there are those who tel! you that cows wil! solve the problem. they won't. The record has proven that. You might go, in.‘ c | But wn Belt Conference to An-/ “Lon ., leows until you turned the Missouri “cha nounce New Battle Line in [river into milk, you would be no of nearer a solution than now of the ic Short Time farm. problem. ee RRS aRS = | “Diversification is merely chang- |The fight for farm equality will] ing the corn from one toe to the other and it don’t help the sore toe. on until it is won. Y : “The farmer must have a st bil- 8 The forthcoming conference of the| athe izations will|ized return for his commodity equal = che to that vouchsafed industry today t noe are sug the tariff. He a bi ce 3 Ce" siting for the re that time|that co-operation will solve his ie aang Trae thomecves to it. | problem. But the experience of the > MiMr. Hoover ha arm equality | co-operatives shows that it is im- 4 20% an and it will jutlined in his| possible to get enough of one prod- Z CYtjeech of acceptance within the next|uct under the ¢ontrol of co-opera- * N70 weeks. tives to make them effective. “net These were statements made yes-| “The banking business was stab- = OMf rday by Congressman L. J. Dick-|ilized by the national currency law tor. cf Algona, Towa, long ajand the federal reserve act. The of Qunch ‘supporter ‘of the Commit-| railroads had their return stabilized } fe ae SwetMo masR os Hoses y NAAR IE UEOWTERS EEN ETNA Freee N RAS rane, by the Esch-Cummins law. We have an emergency tariff for industry, but for the emergency of the farmer we have nothing specific. iciency in Production ‘mer is told by another that what he needs is ef- te of Twenty-four and the position GFia the farm equality problem of the | ‘orn Belt conference. Farmers from al sections of the Pléfissouri Slope country heard and Piipplauded his address here yester- tay when he voiced ardent support Pr every principle of the McNary- 8° faugen bil’ M He concluded it with an appeal Teor every farmer to m-ke farm at quality a matter of personal inter- SiC st, to support only candidates for tO litical office who are pledged to ale and declared the farm organiza- ions have just begun to fight for “he principles involved in the bill EI “The group ficiency in production. He has point- ed out to him the case of the Bo- hemian family of 14 who make the farm go. something like this: of that household to work at 5 o’cloc! until 10 p. m. and things don’t right she becomes more efficient by { In that case efficiency is} morning. If the mother /est precipi ets up and goes|and Bottineau had .12 of an inch. a. m. and toils} All North Dakota points reported 0} maximum temperatures of 80 de- getting up at 4 o'clock instead of 5 and working until 11 instead of 10. If more efficienc. is needed the boy is taken out of school and put to work on the fazn. at 14. That is the kind of efficiency some people would have you have. “I insist that the standards of living for the Ameri should be above such ser: am sure that every red-blooded American citizen here on this day of the anniversary of our national Independence will agree that living standards are to be considered in this equation. “Farm relief is not dead. But every man in public life in the mid- dle west who has opposed it has re- tired from politic, at the request of the voters and I believe that every man in public life who further op- poses it will do likewise. “The McNary-Haugen bill pro- ones to give the farmer bargain- ing power. It proposes to remove him from the influences that now fix prices of his commodities out- side the front gate. “The McNary-Haugen bill will only give the mer a fighting chance; it will not solve all his prob- lems. “Farm relief has become one of the major issues of 1928. Watch the acceptance speeches of the pres- idential candidates and you will be convinced that it is not dead. Go back to your homes and keep your economic interests before you. Work for it, vote ‘t and in the end you will gain that equality with labor and industry that is your right.” Congressman Dickinson was in- roduced by Congressman Thomas Hall. His speech was the feature of the Fourth of July musical and oratorical program at which Judge Christianson presided. TWO CITIES GET RAIN Light showers were reported’ by two North Dakota points during the 24-hour period ending at 7 a. m. this “Villiston had the heavi- tion of .54 of an inch grees. diretoed by President Coolidge. ce Farmers Like Speech Wi Farmers liked Dickinson’s speech titalthough he spoke at a disadvant 7 age, with airplanes roaring overhead, PCrgilroad trains rumbling past the grandstand in Northern Pacific park and all the din and noises of a rec- Plord Fourth of July celebration crowd before him, a crowd largely made Wap of farmers listened t> him for Olmore than an hour and frequently applauded his remarks. ‘The farm problem is not new,” jegaid Dickinson. ‘It existed and it §t-was developing before the war. It iswas made acute by the economic mehanges war brought and by the de- T flation which followed the war. 2: “A great many people have said: "Just let the farm problem alone and 8c it will solve itself,’ but it hasn’t. “Agriculture must have the same at thousand dollars . Capital Funeral Parlors 208 Main Ave. Licensed Embalmer Phone—Day cr Night—22 Jos. W. Tschumperlin 1 t, i he Sea alone i bring knowl ft ; edge of how to Serve Well. Ex Funeral Parlors 210 Fifth St. Phone 687 Bismarck obligation—today! . Dignity marks our Service ac ail times. : as to relieve the —, all contu- a ] standing. misunder- ‘We Understand. A Bay If T: roe YES Dodge Brothers < :andard Six is the fastest car, with the fastest pick-up, under a . . . . . HOWEVER That is only HALF the story. The IM- PORTANT point is that this exceptional speed is made practical by Dodge rugged- ness of chassis and body construction. OTHERS Might succeed in building a car at this price with equal SPEED, but to do so successfully they would also have to build a car with equal STURDINESS . . AND That is where Dodge Brothers, with years of experience in building a dependable low- Cost product, are years ahead of the field. YOU Can buy the Standard. Six knowing that it is not only the fastest car in its class but the sturdiest — and the one is every bit as important asthe other. . . $$75 COUPE F.0.B. DETROIT Isthe price, and you will find our payment- plan one of the most liberal you have ever . . . ° ry M. B. GILMAN CO. Broadway at Second St. BISMARCK, XN. D. Dounce BRaTHers beve _Bver Was One | aie Capital ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MEXICANS FREE YANK HOSTAGES Mexico City, July 5&—@—Dia- patches today said that W. M. Mitchell and John F. Hooper, two American mining men who had been kidnaped, had arrived in Guadala- jara. They were released by their captors without paying the $1,500 ransom demanded. The Americans said they had per- suaded Rosario Guillen, the chief- tain of the band, to allow them to re- turn home. They added that they had been courteously treated and well fed during the time they were held captive in the caves of Judicia Melee near the town of El Salva- jor. The men were captured on June 23 while they were dri in an automobile near Guad: fora en route to Mezquital Del Oro Mines in Honors Bryan The pet ve unud near a the state of Zacatecas. Mitchell vention stood ‘with Si grr manager of the mines. ‘The kidnap- | the bands played “Rock of Ages” ete allowed the Americans chauf-:#fter Josephus Daniels (above), fe te te war-time secretary of navy, had the Sanson, TTOUN Rote TRIO: mounted the platform and deli vered ately sent out in an attempt to res- Perna Wag hs she an served together in the Wilson cabinet. cue the captives. PLANE IS LIFESAVER Long Beach, Cal., July 5.7)— Maybe life guards eaches will be in planes soon. A pilot of a plane noted that Clarence Wheaton of In- dependence, Mo., swimming far out. was in trouble. The plane dropped him a life preserver, which held him up till a boat arrived. The term “furlong” is a short form of “furrow-long.” The average length of a furrow cut by a plow across a field was about 200 yards. From a rough indication of distance it gradually became fixed at 220 yards. vided for, Mr. Hoover will be tically ina west. HOOVER PLANS BAST CAMPAIGN Washington, July 5.—()—Clear- ing the way for an early departure from the capital, Secretary: Hoover planc to confer on Saturday with rominent eastern Republicans for the purpose of establishing a cam- paign organization in that section. All member: of the Republican na- tional committee from the north- eastern states and from Pennsyl- vanig and Maryland have been called to Washington for the meeting and Senator Moses of New Hampshire also is to be present. Moses, who served az permanent chairman of the Kansas City convention, is ex- Pected to be named eastern cam- paign manager. With the eastern situation pro- pre sition to leave for the In this connection an an- Rouncement yesterdav repeated em- va that his program had been intel y, arran, and that he will deliver his resignation from the cab- inet to President Coolidge at the summer White House. A re that Secretary Hoover had offered the vice presidential nomination to Senator Norris of Ne- braska, while the convention was still in progress received an em- phatic denial. A semi-official com- merce department statement brand- ed the story as “preposterous and silly” and reiterated that Mr. choice of a. vice. presidential nom. pee SS ai a ae at Mrs. Thomas Burch Succumbs Tuesday Mrs. Mary Thomson Burch, 38, wife of Thomas M. Burch of Stewartsdale, died oi a jingering ill- ness at St. Alexius hospital Tuesday evening. Mrs. Burch was born in Glasgow, Scotland, Dec. 19, 1890, and came to Stewartsdale at the age of 19. She was married to Mr. Burch Nov. 11, 1912. She leaves besides her husband one daughter and five sons: Anna Blanche, Wesley, Kenneth, Stanley, Bruce, and Duane. Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 2:30 p. m. at the Stewarts- dale sbyterian church. Rev. Paul S. Wright will officiate. Burial will be made at Glencoe cemetery. Juarez Bull Ring Is Destroyed by Flames El Paso, Tex., July 5—(AP)— The Jaurez Bull Ring, outdoor en- tertainment center of the Mexican border city for nearly three decades, was destroyed by fire last night. The frame structure which covered an area the size of a city block, was the scene of many fights in which matadores from Spain and Mexico participated. The cause of the fire was undetermined. | -. THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1998 inthe | _ The national legislative body. of Foland ip called the Sejm. Insect Season. -Now Here Health Authorities Recom- mend Use of Fly-Tox for Security planes fied proved conelu- sively that the fly is one ‘of: mas- kind’s worst ene- mies. As a carrier of disease it bas Ro equal. transmit more in iy ferent dises: say eminent thorities. FLY-TOX not onl; h UF insects oct easily and quiek- ly, but it has other desirable fea- tures _as well. It will not stain. FLY-TOX is harmless to mankind and animals. It leaves a fleetine odor that is cleanly and fragrant. This marvelous insecticide was de- veloped at Mellon Institute of In- dustrial Research by Rex Research Fellowship. It is a scientific prod- uct made to meet today’s - ments household insecticide. It is a clear, clean and pure liquid put up in bottles with the blue label. way nes ay ren AT mae advan of populsrity gai y FLY.TOX. Do not be misled. - mand the genuine FLY-TCX. —Adv. 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