The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 22, 1928, Page 2

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. Da! isnitale, and Junier Fredericks, Man- Sturgis, S. Warren Chidestes, la.; Shayler | Frick, worth Hanson, Two Ha Djarne Haugse, Linton; Missourt Valley, Ia.; ley; Kenneth Clinton Landers, Cr = Pa ERI Ea Munt, Kens: Harry Semin seph pitecle, Sturgis, 1a! Tiemens, a alt Ferretti is Temps. PAGE TWO BOY SOLDIERS “TOBROADCAST ~TNGITY TODAY Speaking Numbers Goes on Air Through KFYR Tonight has been designated “C'ti- aay Military Training Camp Night’ over Hoskins-Meyer n KFYR, and a complete pro- , beginning at 7:30 p.m. has ranted by the boy rolc ical m will be 4 and s vidual d_vceal so! 3. T. C. youths will be lay n'ght. aye CM. T. C. program for to- toni (Taylor)—By the C."—By Sgt. Eurl Buck, ‘“iveu" (Thome)—By the ‘solos, “My Ship" (del Ri- and ‘Sorter Mise You"—By Smith. 3. “Simple Bi ca hone duet, “Highways Are Ways” (Chieulta) — By : Maynard Hart and Rex Valdo, Onéida and Sioux Falls, » 8. Dak. © voral solo, : “When Day Ie Done"—Uy' Joo Morris, Mandan, Selections from "Merry Widow (Lehar)—y the Band. 8. Songs of North Dakota—By the Ma ch Fadiocasting | > rocrem for the tui | | HOOVER’S HOMECOMING SPEECH It hardly seems an occasion for a lengthy pu- an opportunity to recall old associations and This is a homecoming. litical 5) h—rather it is renew old friendships. T am glad, a son of Iowa, to come back to the place where I was born. Here I spent the first ten years of my boyhood. Here my parents and my grandparents toiled, worshipped God, did their part in building this community, and how lie in the cemetery, over the hill. During the past 44 years I have returmed from time to time that ] might pay respect to their memory, that I might express my apprecia- eon of thas kindly and sympathetic folk who, taking a boy to their foarte, wiped away the one grief of childhood. One of my vivid recollections was it in the debate between neighbors and relatives when was to assume no as a Lu », but who was their own flock. That is the spirit of the y for ev na more personal note. < part in that debate and ool, Shr upon our minds so deep as those of early boy- + joys of Lowa —the glories of snowy wiater, the won- crops, the joining of the neighbors to harvést, the t grimage to the river woods for the annual fuel col, the interludes from work, in the swimming s, the hunting for prairie chickens and rabbits in the It is the entry to life which 1 could wish for every and gir lay I have had refreshment of spirit in return to these wimming hole is still in use. It has the same mudbank. It ig still impossible to dress without carrying mud home in one’s inner gar- j;ments. As an engineer I could devise improveme: for that swimmin; hole. But I doubt if the decrease in mothers’ grief at the homecoming o! muddy boys would compensate the inherent joys of getting muddy. T have been to see the old Quaker Meeting House. It has been moved across the street and replaced by a more modern structure. The old build- ing appears at some time to have been turned into a moving picture house, which reminds me of the time I heard Aunt Hannah, moved in meeting, bitterly denounce the rise of modern ways and prophesy that if they per- sisted in, that edifice dedicated to God would some day be transformed into a place of abomination. I do not place the movies in that class, but knowing Aunt Hannah’s views on any form of human reereation, even to the godlesaness of sliding down hill, I suspect that if she knew of this she would get great satisfaction at the consummation of her warnings. This was always a Republican ge. It was here that I received my first touch of the national life. I well recollect the hoisting of the ges and woods, ‘American bo: | Again {scenes. The _ | flag at half mast over my father’s blacgsmith shop on.the assassination of ‘resident Garfield. I algo recollect well the torchlight procession in the Garfield election. I not high enough to be permitted the conduct of a torch, but I participated ea walking alongside for miles. At that u iy - t . time there were two or three Democrats in the town. I do net know MRE! ann’ “Stripes W. forever [today whether what seemed to me an enormous torehlight parade w 3 By the Band. stituicd for their conversion or not, but I believe it was hopeless, beeau: Ife. Selected group By Mise of nonge: Laced npanist, rritel)— Carter, © ‘Paratus ef El By the Band. Selected vocal solo—By Lieut. Leonard McM i 17. Army bugle calls. ik Songs of South Dakota—By tho Male Chorus. 19 i the Bund. 20. 0. Hart, Oneida, 8. Di 21,. Selected vocal xolos—By Major +) Fairbanks, D. C. % 23,“The Star-Spangled Banner"—By 7) the band. ‘Members of the male chorus fol- : Ralph Koehn, Bamidji, ward Cvar, Chisholm, Minn.; . Chisholm, Minn: Harman Harvey; George Jay, Devils "Nelson, “Devils . Lakes rave, Charter Oak, 1a.; Maurice Fuller, Spiritwood; Irancis os Duluth, Minn; Harry Hagen Clarence Schwartz, Tilden erbert Lees, Belvidere, 8. Arthur Rembaidt, Gackle; As- ‘Jensen, Belle Fourche, 8. Dak.; Hiner Lindahl, Titden, New Clarence s, Stanton: Richard Castle, Britton, ak.; Kenneth Nel- e austen’ Minny Lee Heyer, Hw. is Burton, Mobridge, 8. » Lakota; Warren wrence Barr: zg id Hjahmore, 8, Di Pittsburg. Kan. Fy O. Liesemai Mark Wenkstern, El- lan. The roster of the band follows: Ol- iver Bunkol, Noonon; Willi am Brown, Dak. ; Frank Callinan and Devils’ Lak 01 Decoral bors, Minn.; Cari Heine, Kelber, Ash- Ky ew Rockford; Jack ‘McDonald, al; tte, 8. . Dak.; Donald and Raymond ett in. e Iry, are members of hnical Sergeant Q. the director. Temperature i+ 7 a. m. Highest yesterday Lowest last night Precipitation to .7 a. m. Highest wind velocity . Clear Cloudy | Pierre . Rapid City 1... WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly cloudy and cooler tonight, Thursday generally fair, n | slaughtered ow | one industry caRed farming, 4; | time conditions. - {that have taken place. | our people on the farms. B; $8 du other boy | de cf my boyhcod friends and opponents in battle, who I expect is in this audience today, is a descendant of one of those Democrats and has been regenerated only in the last month, I am proud to have been in Iowa, I have ofttimes said that the good Lerd made it the richest stretch of agricultural land thet ever blessed any one sovereign government. It was settled by the adventurous, the courageous, who fought their way across tho ever excending frontier. They have builded here in so short a period as 75 years a state with the least poverty, the highest ave e intelligence, the most gencrous educa- tion, which ever blessed a single commonwealth. Here in West Branch can be found all the milestones of the changes which have come to American agriculture. Only a mile from here is the farm of my Uncle Allan, where 4 spent some years of my boyhood. That was just at the passing state of the great pioneer movement. Man: farms were still places where we tilled the soil for the immediate of the families. hogs for meat; we wove at least a part of our own cloth- ing; we repaired our own machinery; we got our own fuel from the woods; we erected our own buildings; we made our own soap; we preserved our own fruit and grew our own vegetables. Only a small part of the family living came by purchases from the ou! . Perhaps 20 per eent of the products were sold in the markets to purchase the small margin of necessities which we could not ourselves produce, and to pay interest on the mortrage. ve In a half century the whole basis of agriculture has shifted, we have improved seed and livestock, we have added a long list of mechsmical in- ventions for saving of labor; we have increased the productivity of the land. And it has become a highly specialjzed business. There is no longer but in fact a dozen industries. Probably over 80 per cent of its products now go directly or indirectly to the markets ; is FeoPany, over 80 per cent of the family living must be purchased from » | Or In the old days, when prices fluctuated in the Chicago market, they affected only 20 per cent of the income of the farm. A vio- a) in prices could reduce the family income by only four of five per ‘oday, the same fiuctuation te price, affecting as it does 30 per cent to 100 per cent of the products of the farm, can take 25 or 50 per cent away from the net family income and e the difference between comfort and freedom from anxiety, or on the other hand, debts and dis- couragements, ‘ I do not suggest @ return to the greater security which agriculture en- Joyed in its earlier days, because with that security were lower standards of living, greater toil, less opportunity for leisure and recreati 3 of the comforts of homes, less of the joy of living. 1 am often conscious of sentimental regret for the passing of those eld I have sometimes been as homesick for the ways of those self-contained farm homes of forty years ago as I have been for the kindly folk who lived in them. But I know it is no more possible to revive those old conditions than it is to summon back the relatives and friends in the cemetery yonder. While we recognize and hold fast to what is permanent in the old-time conditions, we must uccept what is inevitable in the changes It is fortunate indeed that the principles upon iad our government was founded require no alteration to meet these changes, ‘culture so there is in other in- there is more special log on the farm, so there ig in We live today by the exchange of goods among ten thousand sorts of producers of specialties. A large number of occupa- tions which were conducted on the farm in old days are now cond the factory. That is one reason why we have a decreasing proportion ef this revolution the American farmer has be- come enmeshed in powerful and yet delicate economic forces which are working to his disadvantage. nig Beng tance speech ten days ago I made an ex! upon the legis Proposals for relief te the sazicaltarel lustry hich the Republican party has put forward in its platform, You would not wish me to take your time to review that statement. I should, however, like to emphasize that the spirit of those legislative proposals is to work out @ more economical and stable marketing system. A federal is to be set up with necessary poms and resources to assist the in- itry to meet not alone the varied problems of today but those which may arise in the future. M: fundamental concept of agriculture is controlled by its own members, organized to fi ht its own economic battles and to determine its own destinies. Nor do I speak of organization in the narrow sense of traditional farm co-operatives of pools, but in the much wider sense of a sound marketing organiza It is not by these proposals intended to put the government into the control of the business of agricu!ture, nor to subsidize prices of farm produets and pay the losses eon either by the federal treasury or by a tax or fee on the farmer. with governmental assistance end an initial advance of capital to enable the arricultural industry to rozch a stature of modern business operations by which the farmer will attain his independence tain his individuality. pon shis whole question I should like to repeat from my accept: of agricultural relief constitutes the most important administration. The object of our poiicies it es. t3 an income equal to those of other occupations; for vifa the same comforts in her home as women in ether farm boys and girls the same opportunities in life as d girls. So far as my own abilities may be of service, I them to help secure prosperity and contentment in that pete, I and Ty creer were born and nearly all my family 00d, in formulating recommendations for legislation to carry out the posals of the party, I trust that we may have full assistance of the leaders of agricultural thought. I am not insensible of the value of the study whieh sincere farm leaders have given to this question of farm legisla- tion. They have all contributed to the realization that the problem must be solved. They will be invited into conference. Outstanding farmers such as Governor Lowden will be asked to join in the search for common ground upon which we can act. T had thought today to particularly point out the importance of the de- velopment of our interior waterways as bearing on the rosperity not only of agriculture but of the whole of our midwest buviness and com- merce. It is a most important supplement to agricultural relief. The rily large advances in railway rates from the war militate against for North Dakota: Partly cloudy, | ¢ possibly thunda:showers this efter- oon or tonight southeast portion, Cooler tonight. Thursday generally f ‘and cooler portion. _, WEATHER CONDITIONS a area extends from ones athwestward to Wyom- temperatures and at eS are central and northern Piains over the centre! ne rod the price he economic setting of this whole interior section. This, together with the cornpletion of the Panama al ard the fact ocean rates have in- creased but little since before war, further turbs the whole eco- nomic relationship: of the midw It is as if a row of toll gates had been placed around this whole ion of our country. I¢ seriously af-. fects the fi ink we can accept it 2s an economic fact that the farmer on most occasions pays the freicht on his products, It is a de- duction from the ultimate price. You yourselves can test this. In a gen eral wey, the center roint of markets is 0 vor the Atlantic seaboard, where p: are id by the m g of the streams of world products. For every hundred miles you are removed from these market | farm ‘ts is lower by the amount of freight tates, \ Some calculations whic mace a fow years ago showed that the increaros in railway rates bad in effect moved the midwest 200 to 400; miles further Moreover, some of the petitive agri- to seaboard 1 iy are ail to Xs A a grea vantage sportation rates also affects fe ground our wheat and corn on toll at the mill; we | pug, and main: | vhich Fran! ‘_fHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE through the modernization of our great interior waterways. By ernization I mean increasing depths to a point where we can hai or ten thousand tons in a line of barges pulled by a tug. istration has authorized the systematic undertaking of this m Within a few ycars we will have Peg te the empenihe up to Pittsburgh, the Missouri up to Kai ee aha, and beyond, the Mississippi to St. Paul and Minneapo! ¢ Lilinois to ‘Chicago. We jalre:dy have experience with results, for with only the main river from {St. Louis to New Orleans as y@ porting Properly, the rates for trans- portation of bulk agricultural products through that s2ciion is near pra- war railway rates. We will not have the advantage of full results until ‘the entire Mississippi and its tributaries are in one connected trang- portation system. ‘ We have another great opportunity of relief in the building ef a shipwa, from the Great Lakes to the sea. Our cogineers Baye recom. mended the St. Lawrence route as the preferable outlet. administra- tion has undertaken negotiations with Canada upon the subject. If these negotiations fail we must consider alternative routes. In any event, the completion of this great system of barge lines om the rivers and con- necting the lakes with the gulf, of opening a shipway from the lakes to the sca, will make an. effective transpvriation system 12,000 mile: length, penetrating twenty midwest states. It will connect these states with seaboard at the gulf on one hand and he North Atlantic on the other. And this means more than the mer ving upon the aetual goods shipped over these routes. If part of your crops can move to market at a 7- to 10-cent saving per bushel, the buyers’ competitive ue ae for this portion of the crop will force upward the price of the whole crop. mod- le five: dustry and business in the midwest. The manufacturer and merchant in this section is suffering from a curtailment of his distribution fiel his business province has shrunk. This development should tend to increase facturing industry in the midwest and thereby create a larger ‘iversity of employment and a greater local market for Agricul- tural products. Nor does tl development mean the crippling of our railways. The annual increase in railway tra’ will give to them a far mere than complete offset to these diversions. Moreover, everything that increases the prosperit of the country also helps the railways. The Policy of rapid consummation of this great Project will be continued if the Republican ee be continued. We should at the rate of progress ha® completed the Mississiept pled within the next four years. It is a vital part of the rehabilitation of the middle west agriculture and business. present ve materially affected |1DHW or 1HW. 1.11% @1.12% | 915,000,000 in bank loans. Time The modernizations of cur waterways recall again the garlier life of putida ot eorive +|__ To arrive 1.11%@ money and commercial paper rates Towa. At one time its transportation was in larzo degree over these same if ond @ slight reduction .|Grade of— were unchanged. rivers—and many of our pioneers reached this state by the eld paquet Substantially all Canadian terriroy|1DHW or 1HW. 1.07% @1.09% adership of the market was di- boats and their own rafts. Nor are the days of the pioneer over. We | reported general conditions weil] To arrive 107%@ vided among Radio, General Motors, have to TV Staetd through economic problems, through sclentifi¢ develop- | above ‘average, with estimates of|Minn. & S. D. and U. S. Steel, all of which changed ment and invention, onto frontiers j s forbidding, just as romantic, yields surpassing a ten-year average. | 12% Protein— hands in large volume. Radio ran *, as our fathers ever knew. The|” More or less general buying of/1DHW or 1HW..... 1.08% @1.11% | UP 6% points to 190%, General Mo- lon will be whether we can overcome these frontiers, | wheat, however, devel at times| To arrive ....:.., 1.06% @1.09% | tors climbed more than 3 points to old mastery over the system we have created, whether today, especially on declines. Houses |Grade of— 189, and U. S. Steel common ad- we can maintain the advantage we have inherited, whether we can hold | with eastern and foreign connections|1DHW or 1HW..... 1.05% @1.07% | vanced to 162%, or within 1% points ourselves a nation dedicated to equal opportunity ‘f . were rather conspicuous in this pur-|_ To arrive .....5.. 1.05% @1.07% | Of the year’s high. There are those in this audience whe saw Tow ‘an open prairie. I| chasing. Gloomy descriptions of the |Durum— Weekly steel trade reviews again recall members 0° my own boa aa in my childhood were still breaking food situation is Russia were r--|Choice 1 amber..... 1.10% @1.12% | Were optimistic in character, stress- the soil in the western part of the state ang were then still living in the | ferred to reason, and there was} To arrive ...... ++ 1,10% @1.12% | ing the stiffening of pig iron prices. first sod houses of the pioncer farmer. Our“fathers and fathers who] also talk that with both pclisical|13% Protein— Several more favorable earnings re- [ena over the midwest were self-reliant, rugged God-fearing people of parties in the United States com-|2 amber . ae 1.08% @1.12% Ports by small industrial companies indomitable courage. They combined to build the roads, bridges and towns; | faitted {e farm relief many fa-mors|Choice of 1 amber... 1.06%@1.08% | W¢re published during the day, they cooperated together to erect their schools, their churches, and to would be likely to hold as much| To arrive + 1.06% @1.07% Express shares showed extreme raise their barns and harvest their fields. They asked only for freedom le in a hope of bet-|12% Prote’ rises, American soaring 11 Points, of opportunity and on equal chance. In these conceptions Hes the real ter prices. 2 amber . 1.05% @1.07% | Adams 10, and American Railways 5. basis of American democracy. They and their fathers gave a genius to September corn was unsettled and |Grade of 1 (98% @1.08% | Limken, Otis Elevator, Woolworth, American institutions that distinguished our people from other in | although weaker early rallied later. (97% @1.02% | Sears-Roebuek, and Eisenlohr To- th world. Their demand for an equal chance is the basis of American |Deferred futures held within narrow 197% @1.02% | bacco sold 4 to 5 points higher. Progress. To those who have by neccssity worked in other lands comes limits, and December dropped below 96% @1.01% Heavy accumulation of National this most vivid meaning of America and a deep gratitude for what our |72 cents for the first time in about 25%®@ | Cash Registers, based on rapidly ex- fathers have builded. Here there are no limits to hope; no limits upon two weeks, but no stop loss orders! %@ panding sales of new business ma- accomplishment. Our obligation today is to maintain that equal oppor- | were uncovered, and the market ral- Coarie Grains chines, carried that stock up to a tunity for agriculture as well as for every other calling. lied with wheat. Pit traders bought !2 yellow corn....... ..95%@ .96% |"eW high at 75. Other issues to When we traverse the memories of those who have builded this state /on the decline, and there was siso yellow corn. 94% @ 195% | break into new high ground included and this nation we recall those acts which are rooted in the soil of service. | short covering on account of the| To arrive .. ‘92% American Smelting, Granby, Brock- ‘When we rehearse our own memories we find that none give South Dakota, official semi-monthly 4 yellow corn. 89% @ .93%| Way Motor, Mohawk Carpet, S. S. comfort and satisfaction as the record of service we have summary showing deterioration in| To arrive .. 8.7%@ '| Kresge, Corn Products, United Drug, , render. I do not believe our le have lost these finer qualities of |that state. yellow corn. 89%@ .98%4 | 2nd Loft. character; self-reliance, or initiative, nor have they lost the great| All’ deliveries of oats sold at a/6 yellow corn. ‘82%@ (84% | A wave of acne during the qual ty which they imbedded. in American charagter, the quality new low on the crop, but the market |2 mixed corn. to1% | Morning carried ‘Cudahy Packing, neighborly cooperation and mutual service. It is in this quality that our firmed up slightly later with wheat.!3 mixed corn. 8714 Commercial Solvents, St. Louis hopes must lie i: the solution of our great problems. Prevlatis easier because of scat-| | To arrive .. : Southwestern, and Montgomery And I must say again that the solution of these problems has but one tered sélling which more than off-/4 mixed corn. say, | Ward down 2 to 4 points, and sev- purpose—t is, the comfort and welfare of the American family and |set an advance in the value of hogs.! To arrive .. : cral others a point or more, but puy- the American home. Tho family is the unit of American life and the -_— 15 mixed corn gey,|in& support was quickly’ supplied home is the sanctuary of moral-inspiration and of the American spirit, WHEAT ING mixed corn ‘go24 [and they rallied with the re: of the The true conception of America is not 2 country of 110,000,000 people, re FEE eG oness white oat: 36%, | list in the early afternoon, but a nation of 23,000,000 famiies living in 23,000,000 homes. I ‘pledge Minneapolis, Aug. 22.—(AP)—/3 white ont: 135 — my services to thesc homes. Wheat was nervous and erratic to- i @- SO. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK ae Pot oe $2 33°" |, South St. Paul, Aug. 22,1m_(y late in the session on a quick rally 63 | Paul, Aug. 22. (U. FARM LEADERS __ loses, theron trom the fotera in ouside mares, “High price fr around osdst on aonie “Ramin s. the were recorded near the close. @ 61 : : ASKED TO JOIN jon, tns Se Sik wobmamantal| Ents Riad wey tod tes Nianes| : tolerate cert and yearlings in IN RELIEF UNIT assistance tnd an inal advance at|ere., Other grains rallied with 55 @ 5B [1400; graseere ISTE; wecntye hea (Continued fiom paze one) cavity be pe Har eee wnat ad ‘closed higher dor the day. 80% 01% jetterings ree she stock 7.50@9.00 seat ay ju reach a siti ee Laas F cows and 8, 11.00 for heifers; overflowing the tents. It was in| Stature of modern business opera.| Oats cipal Hig hep ween aun No. 1 flasesd 2122. Seto ox, Several loads ce desirable: apd 4 that place and in that setting that |tions by which the farmer will at- pafaag ice atecay Bases foiates| Go ye ay 122.024 jheifers 11.50¢712.50; cutters 6.00@ the Republican standard-bearer gave jtain his independence and maintain| £0", 8nd Oragey. carey, fulites) To arrive ........ 201%@ 7.00; bulls weak, spots 10 to 25 cents is second message to the country, /his individualit oie eS easy and quiet. lower; bulk 8.25@8.75; stockers and one deallag first with boyhood mes- fe lake Cash wheat offerings were mod-| CHICAGO GRAIN TABLE _|feeders unchanged. ories, and secondly with farm relief.| Expanding his previous statement erate, and demand for average qual- Chicago, Aug. 22.— (>) Calves, 2,200; on-"~ - --idered, Has Audience Laughing regarding the Soreceneat .of the) ity was fair to good. High protein Oran eco Close |302y to weak; 16.50 mostly. As he called up recollections of /Missisaippi and the building of al vrerings were comparatively: light,| Wheat ore” High Low Close | "Grogs e oon ae nee yap his childhood and the passing of his |Greab Lakes to the Atlantic water-| ond demand was good, ‘Sept. 1.07% 1.09% 9,07% 109% )(710tS hieher than Tuesday; sorted father and mother the nominee | way a8 a mcans of farnishing lower ‘Winter wheat was steady. De 4 112% 1.14% 1.123% 1.12% | sts and light butchers 12 19 Ans meres: oe ponniegeae = irate Fe prota going Durum was easy for low protein, 'March 117% 119% 117% ETH \peey, oe other: medium and on to ¢ , Hoover - j ers 11.! x a the long ago he had his" audience gineers had recommended. the St He tee eee fetter, and ship. |M2Y,, 120 121% 120° 121% fen maehers 11.50@ 700: srmenth laughing, and they applauded as he | Lawrence route to the Atlantic, but] ping directions fair to good. Weegee gk cay (sae goy,|butchery kinds up to 11.25; pigs gave & pledge that if elected his ad- |that if negotiations with Canada for | Pigg titecrions fete to good. | ‘Deer T5 ABa Ding SBR |stendy, largely 11.50; ‘average cect ministration would seck a sound so- the construction of this route failed, mand good. Mach. 4 yee Tuesday 11.20; weight 274. lution for the ills of agriculture. | alternative routes would have to be Oats were in fair to good demand, | May vee ‘ en Sheep, 2.000; sheen and cull lambs The crowd manifested its approval |considered, good weight ruling firm. p iad Sadi steady: bidding mostly 25 cents low- of his promise to call in the leading| “In any event, the completion of Rye was firm to 1c higher, with a |, gy 36 35 g¢ [ets better erade naive lambs 122° farmers of the country, among them (this great system of barge On| better general demand. lnercnee: tH oe 138% | @15.25; culls wostly 9.50; fat ewe: former Governor Frank 0. Lowden |the rivers and connecting the lakes Barley was quiet for ordinary to! Mar pate aie tle ‘a %|to packers 4.00@6.00. of Ilinois, one of the strongest of | with the gulf and of opening a shi wr quality, and demand was good wore? “42! ae ane otc acaba his opponents in the race for the| way from the lakes to the sea,” he|fermeline grades: Price hence was May Aa Ae 42% MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR presidential nomination, in an effort continued, “will make an effective|58e to 63%e. Si aa 943 98 94 Minneapolis, Minn. Aug. 2°. to find “a common ground upon |transportation system 12,000 miles| Flaxseed was firm, with a better | Sept. ore bed he zp Flour unchanged. Ship: Which ,we can find a common s0-/in mete penetrating twenty mid-|demand. Offerings were moderate. | 1°. “18% ‘one ei 2047 beets ii ‘ lution.’ states. -meang more -_——_—______ Pee " # ran 24. 5.00, h Hoover seemed to be more at home jthan the meré saving upon the CARLOT SALES a seperti seai in facing an audience of his ‘fellow jtual goods shipped on these routes, Mincpolee Minny Aug. 22.—(>) fey sa i220 Had CHICAGO CHEESE Towans than he has been at any other |If part of your crops can meve to|—Range of carlot vain sales:| Ribs— ‘i . io Chicago, Aug. 22.) —Cheese meeting of the campaign. He was market at a seven to ten cent sav-|Wheat No. 1 dark northern 1.09%@ Sept. 14.85 14.27 14.27 higher: twins 23% @24; twin daisies given an ovation appeared, and |ing per bushel, the buyers’ competi. |1.81%; No. 1 hard spring 1.13%4@ Oat. i 13.95 |2°% @24%; single daisies 24@24%: another the ing up tive bidding for this portion of the|1.17;. No. 1 hard aur 1.10% @ | Sani, : sore ESN) Americas 24@24%; long horns 23% after the singing of “The Star-|crop will foree upward the priee of|1.31%; No. 2 amber durum 94%; ee 5,90 | @24%5 brick 24@24%, Spangled Banner,” in which Mrs.|the whole crop.” No, i ‘mixed durum 1.00% @1.12%; Sept. 15:92 S87 3600 pet Hoover and her sons, Herbert J. and No. 1 mixed wheat 1.08%. ele 1 8 nies HICAGO POULTRY lan, join a will. ove- grad ; = cago, 22.) ment. ‘of the nominee’s lips indicated J eg le, 58% @59; MINNEAPOLIS RANGE alive, ans ue palais fear that he, too, was repeating the ee See Minneapolis, Aug. 22) a¢|ceints 3 cars; fowls 25@30; escines words, although his volce was lost Oats—No. 3 white, 28% @34%4. ah Aes High Low lose /31-" broilers ‘spring ducks 17> pe Neg Renal dti ty him L AKE SUPERIOR Bye—No ses. aie a, 40a 10a dorm |B te sees 10: wa : os eee Deg, 1.10% 1.11% 1.10% 111% sipAnin mnanie Biseck, Jows, Aug. ag + CHICAGO POTATOES a 416% 1.17% 1.16% 1.17@ cance oe Ge fe ere! in . mica hanged; recei ich Frenie 0, Lowden, of Tilnois — Fiagja NOS corpeiges POSER BBY 89. 8% 88% | MET chore seni sae oan and other farm leaders, will be| Madaleine Island, Wis., Aug, 22.—|track 163, total U.S. shipments 522|D&- 90% 91% 90 90% lextra firsts “SDOSEIN fee, 29@ asked to participate in the search| ("A “day's cruise on the tive wa-leses; suppliss tnodernion mrarieg |< Oats— 33 88% 39% 99% |81%4s ordinary firsts 27@28%4, ~ Mm for a common ground upon which to! ters of Lake Superior, wandering as| slightly stronger on sacks, steady on jy, pt. ‘35! Rit td ae heese unchanged. . t for farm relief, was proposed) his fancy dictated amid the wooded els; Ke and Missouri sacked | "5; PR? ee, Thin nema comize oddvess in the | ett of the Apostle Archipelago, Irish Cobblers 70@85; Wisconsin! «.F1™~ 9091 a 02x 201s 2.01% Z “4 in his home coming address in the nad been looked forward to by Presi: | sacked Irish Cobblers 1.25; Virginia Oct. §—- 2.04% B04 208% 208% | CHICHICAGO CASH GRAIN heart of the corp belt. dent Coolidge ever sinee he came to|barrel Irish Cobblers 2.60@2.65. (pec 3.98% 206% 206% 206 Non eeg Ate y, 22 —#)—Wher “In formulating recommendations | Wisconsin, Today he had the op- ec. .f 06% 2. . jNo- 2 hard 1.08%@1.09%; No.1 for legislation to carry out the pro- | portunity to © t his desire. CHICAGO PRODUCE Barley: 1% 8% (romthern spring 1.09%@1.10; No. 2 posals of the party,” the Republican | ‘The Nellewoed, a 70 foot cabin| Chicago, Aug. 22.—(P)—Tradi SB ARTE BRM |malxed 1.08, idential candidate said, “I trust! cruiser, had been placed at the chief| in butter was quiet and unchang Dec. be 58% .59- Corn—No. 2 mixed, 93% @94: No. t we may have the full assistance | executive's disposal for the day by| prices were noted. Eggs sold at DULUTH RANGE 1 yellow 1.02; No. 8 white 95@96. of the leaders of cultural | Frank Woods of Lincoln, Neb. higher points under de- OTH R “9. Qate—No. 2 white 86% @37%. thought. I am not insensible to thé| this morning the cruise: was await- offerings. Poultry was| Duluth, Minn., Aug. feed Rye—No. 8, 95@%.- value of the study which sincere] ing at Bayfield, ite Madaleine| higher and potatoes showed firm. Open High lose) Barley—50@75. farm leaders have given to this! Island on the mainland ‘and $0| ness: Durum. 99% 1.01 Timothy seed 4.20@4.80. question of farm legislation. They! miles from Cedar Island neon Sept. 1.00% 1.01% gat Hr Clover seed 20.50@28.75 have all contributed to the realiza-| where President and Mrs. ee Oct. 1.01% 1.02 1.00% Lard, 12.95, at tion that the problem must be solved. |had'arrenged te tessa ie, CR ase D Dec. 1.08% 108% 1.02% 1.08%| Ribs, 14.62 They will be ae) into conference. | small group of friends had ‘been in- Rve— 90% Bellies, 16.12. Outstanding farmers such as Gover-' vited to ‘on the eruise. ; Sept. 20% 20% 80% 2 nor Lowden will be asked to join in| No specific itine had béen sét Dec. 1% 22% 91% 91% the search for common ground upon for the Nellewood whici. was instead AD | sohtt* 2.06 soni 2.04% 2.06% a which we ean act.” to wander in and out of the shores, Ory Bore Zor 20s% 208 sy ‘The calling of such a conference| until about noon’ when, with utter = Get .. neue seen aon aor naturally is predicted upon Hoover's | lack of formality a piqnic | Paris, Aug. 22.—()—Elaborate | Dec. 08% 2. election, but the nominee did not in-| hed been ordered. Devil's arations for the signing of the BISMARCK GRAIN i dicate whether he would invite the “and renunciation war trea ) farm leaders in immediately after in on Monday are being Asad Pee Se asag a bythe French government, (very modest in F Governet Lowden is, th icin Se Eames is, bring. fos a or n is the in te, Havre ' of the equaliza-; the meal. < cial train fe, Ha of Stare Hollong N ‘ould have made A A farm Ftc? : oe _ ple ed ican convention - | Ca ‘where Frejected that pl CAPE BACK > will be .ectived ceremoniously withdrawal from the'. A new light red av gd satin eve railway ctation by Foreign race for the nominatior which went "ing.gown is fashioned with a sap linister Briand and other promin- to Hoover on the first ballot. | back and pane’ sash ends that officials. we In his address here the G. 0, P, and round and {all below the hem 18| “Uncer the present plan, the secre- <ke standard bearer reiterated the de+-, the back. ef state will sail for home from laration -made in accoptands| WINTER DOLMAN =18 aboard Hard-winter arate + speech a ee Repaiichs pisttorm A luxurl Avegs Sept. 8 instead of carlier as hed Dark hard winter wheat. propenel ¢i oe trate i Fea ci yr ing ee ean heave almost a week in About'17 “pet cent of the tetal| 0 ides making his visit to;merchant tonnage under the TO re M oO (@) R E : we of free | American flag is represented dl CICARS And this development concerns not alone agriculture, but every in- | © WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1928 “MARKETS , By Associated Press Leased Wire GRAIN FINANCIAL a. STOCK MARKET TURNS UPWARD Pool Operations in Wide Va- rieties Stimulate Prices to High Levels LIVESTOCK MINNEAPOLISeCASH CLOSE Minneapolis, Minn., Aug... 22.—(#) ‘Wheat reseipts today 264 com- pared to 272.4 year ago. Minneap- olis. cash wheat and coarse grain closing quotations today Yollow: Cash Wheat— -: Deliv. WHEAT PRICES | CONTINUE LOW Ideal Harvesting Conditions in Canada Sends Values Downward Chicago, Aa 22.—(\—With har- vesting general in Canado aa eee conditions there reported as ideal, wheat prices here averaged lower early today. Bottommost quotations t this season were touched by wheat deliverable in Su,tember. Op- ening 1-4c to 1 1-8c off, wheat dis- ed con. ‘derable po ‘er to rall; 114% Protein— ,1 dark northe To arrive 2.dark north 13% Protein— 1 dark northern. To arrive .. j2 dark northern. 12% Protein— 1 dark northern To atrive .. 1114%@ 2 dark northern..... 1.09% @1.12% Crade of— 1 dark northern..... 1.08% @1.10% 2 dark northern..... Grade of— 4 1 northern ... 1.27% @1.31% 1.25% @ 1.24% @1.29% 1.20% @1.23% 1.19% @1.20% 1.17% @1.21% 1.1% @1.14% New York, Aug. 22.—(AP)—Stoch jprices made further recovery today under the stimulus of pool opera. * tions in a wide variety of moter, food, drug, copper, merchandising, jand public utility shares. Railroad ne ae which ce Ue iy e advance earlier ie week, + 107% @1.09% isi i . turned dull on profit-taking. Trad- wis Nass wick Oe rare a To arrive + 107%@ ing showed a moderate expansion in 1 1-8¢ decline to 1-8¢ advance and|2 northern .-.-..,.. 105% @1.08% folume, the 2,000,000-share mark ve. i Montana — " ore the Getseauantly showing © general) 40) Proteln— third hour. ee {1DHW or 1HW. Te Money rates continued relatively To arrive 1 1 . firm, but spparently were disre- arded as market factors. Call ‘oney renewed unchanged at 7 per ent and held steady at that figure carly, despite the calling of about Announcement that newly har- vested whcat is arriving in Winnipeg gave emphasis to word today of vir- tually perfect conditions for rapid harvesting in Canada. According to advices at ‘and, light frosts hereto- 13% Protein. 1DHW or 1HW. To arrivi 12% Protei ‘els n

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