The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 24, 1928, Page 6

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PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 1S PROSPEROUS Agricultural Production Than Manufactures and Minerals Less CONSTRUCTION BOOMING Task ef Finding Foreign Mar-) kets for American Products Lessens q Washington, Nov. 24.—(AP)-Her- bert Hoover's last official pro- nouncement as a servant of the gov- ernment before his ele. dent was made public form of the annu Commerce Departime: year 1928, which cl The documer ed last Jun s keynote stre sed y of the States dur- and its prevailingly In_ the foreword, n_ preduc- es, the sin transport a of fir treated, while agriculture was a special study. “Viewing th ation as a vw difference tions in the the preced Hoover’ harvested were in the given :, PREP rked n condi- icultura Vious year except Agricultural Increase $ “It is true th agricultural pr ase in over a lorg period of ti during re- W. O. Owen, cent years has been ¢ colonel, is the id than that in the ators engaged in long, hazardous manufactured and min The demar for farm which are for the most part neces. |p ities of life, tends to increase i? any mere rapidly than population. |} produ On the other hand, there is practic- |¢ 9 limit to the demand for man- | ¢ commodities, md ‘ e in the nature of nis |b Even if the nced for one type is fully met, new and more j¢ highly elaborated articles are con- stantly coming into use with th Vancing standards of - | flight at i hoomed a salute of 21 guns—the a San Pedro, Calif. ( znd South America. ver (indicated by the arrow) aboard Admiral Willi the battleship. rom leaving the ks fe HOOVER REPORT! First Picture of Hoover's Departure on South American Peace Tour SHOWS NATION) | t of Los Angeles), on S picture, taken by a cam presidential salute—President-Elect Herbert Hoover and Admiral Pratt is with the group in the foreground. JOHN-DOLORES NUPTIALS SEEN Barrymore-Costello Wedding Surrounded by Mystery of Preparations Los Angeles, Nov. 24.—(4)—De- spite uncertainty regarding the ! status of the reported divorce of John Barrymore and his second wife, mysterious preparations in screen- land were believed to indicate that wedding bells would ring quietly for the actor and Dolores Costello at a private ceremony in Hollywood to- day. | Mystery surrounding the proposed | nuptials was heightened last night ; When a huge wedding cake, said by | a downtown catering establishment to have been ordered by Barrymore, was delivered to an unrevealed ad. | dress. The destination of the wed- ; ding cake had not been disclosed this | | marriage license bureau when he calls for the license which he applied | for three days ago. ; . The actor declined again yesterday | to state when and where his second wife, Blanch Oelrich, who is known under the pen name of Michael Wipers obtained a divorce from | im. After it was reported he had ap- plied for the license to wed, an un- the Battleship Maryland for his neraman for The Tribune and NEA iam V. Pratt's launch just before ARING RATIONS FOR AVIATORS IS ‘MISSION’ OF COLONEL’S WIDOW | tdentified woman telephoned the | marriage license bureau and advised |caution in issuing Barrymore a li- jcense. “He is not yet divorced from j his second wife,” said the woman, | Who refused to give her name and Steele, visited at Friday and Saturday. Robert Meland of Driscoll is vis- iting with his grandpa Riley at George Kush’s od for Lindbergh, Byrd, Wilkins on Historie Flights Washington, over land or sea. | nsiders it a mission to pre- r them a supply of compact end Col. Charles A. Lind-| "Miss Olive Johnson visite. at the | ergh, Comm. Richard E. Byrd,, Boohister home Sunday. ‘apt. George Wiki and Lieut.) Max Lang visited at Harry Edger- x ilt are but a few of the, ley's Sunday. E yrominent fliers to receive one of “Max Lang shipped hogs and cat- her carefully packed boxes of food.’ tle Tuesday. | The food consists of dehydrated) An elevator meeting was held in' uck. chicken, salmon, beef, fresh! Sterling Saturday night. grains and is pre- al process of cook- ion worked out by hall. , Johnson's orchestra of Bismarck. the Henry Stiles home Sunday. \ Music was furnished by Hazel | Johnson helped his brother | Car Tyler haul pigs to town Mond-y. Max Lang motored to Bismarck | Saturday. Emma Schoper, who has had an) S. ozeration for appendicitis, returned | Y home Saturday. Mrs. Carey Johnson visited at | Mr. and Mrs. Hen! Stiles and children had supper at Will Stiles | Wednesday evening. | Emil Leng was in Bismarck Sun-! ay. Cubby Hrdlicka, a brother of Athen Mrs. Henry Stiles, who has been Turning to anothe by government agen- working around here this fall, and port remarked that “during the past cies a! show that the Bub Barro: cousin of Henry Stiles, seven or eight years. the amount of foods so preparcd are high in vita-/ left for their home at Stewartsville, construction (of buildings) in the |min content to hun-! Minn., Thursday. United State been unparalleled ger, palatable ble of re- Paul Lang motored to Bismarck in the history of this or any other maining in po condition indefi- Sunday. Ohba P ; ys Revival meetings wer This high activitiy reflects both asic clemenis in the proc. Driscoll the past week. M expansion of the equipwent of in-less were worked out by Mrs. Owen|Edgetley attended them: Thareday dustry and commerce.” Mr. Hoover’, al ; report said. after of the continuatio provement in th equipment, and, abo quality of the homes of h tinued to furnish adequate ficient service and to enjo. traffie and revenues.” ‘The betterment of railway sery- ice has been the result of effort on} the part of railway companies them- | selves,” it was added, “and of co-! operation on the part of shippers receivers of merchandise. The way companies have improved t roadbeds and equipment. men has been of regional advise: American Railway / Analyzing the movement of gold to Europe, with the fluctua serve bank rate that ha ied it, and the resulting sv ank deposits, it aid that after making allowance for “the extra- ordinary volume of tradiy illustrated by prepared b; department tor in that acti ity. Canada’s emergence as the be customer of the Unitcd States dis- | placing Great Britain from a long | held post, w nd the con- clusion pres tional exchanges for brought about “very vestments of Am: foreign countri Expansien in the factured goods presenting a stuc the assistance of of the foreign trad tion, was the most disclosed. Americans Are Vigerous “The efficiency of American pro- duction, the vigorous efforts of American bu s men in finding: markets, and the active aid in pro- moting trade,” the report declared, “have borne fruit which must fur- nish satisfaction to all classes of our | people. Notwithstanding the excep- tionally self-sufficient position of the United. States, our high stan- dards of living demand the import of a number of important and many minor commodities which the country itself cannot produce. “The task of finding foreign mar- kets for American products has met | with noteworthy measure of suc-| cess.” W. P.‘MacCracken, istant sec- retary for gerenautics, declared in an accompenying report that there bad been “phenomenal progress in every phage of the industry” during tl remarked “unprece- dented increase in air transport serv- ice glone,” which had resulted in in- creasing the regularly flown air route. mileage in the coyntry from $896 miles to 11,191. Railroad in- ‘erest in the field had brought about ition. and the development of ts had made more usable available. “Commercial seronautics is no ae on the threshold,” ch ; “It has entered the bu: nest world, and without subsidy, has 5 an integral part of American istry. and transportation. There ix:,every indication of still greater r during the ensping biennial Period,” ' _.> LADIES KEEP OUT! London, Nov. 24.—At a farm in some 50,000 mice. of silver, lemon, are ‘raised *t Klein, export of man Klein said, ppared in fable fact | r “are reared with coats | and brown Owen in 1804. manded the first hospital ship to ag ‘the stud {food f during the world war, was abandoned at the cl wa ling long, hi Owen pi ae carry dime 3 8 the dance jsiven evening in Sterling ike in Os ts living with Colonel Colonel Owen com- sent to Manila in 1598, and here n N Owen used her process for preparing food. possible use by the army/| but renewed dezth four yei aft y adapied it- if to the needs of fliers att: prepared of the tions tors | the which she tle private The study | Esther Lang, who attend the Ja of the|town college, spent Satur Colonel | Sunday at Sterling. inday night. x ' Maude Cheno Professor Cubby — Hrdlick Henry Stiles’ brother, accompanied by Ed- New clements were added to the|gar Johnson motored to Glen Ulli jProcess when she again undertook | Monday. and preparation of such|day. They reutrned the came and The Misses Marion Lewis Mr. and Mrs. George Kush and son Dean, Mr. and Mrs. Van Horn of =| Driscoll and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest | Johnson kad of | Stewart home Sunday evening. supper at the Tom Shirley and Glen Stewart. stayed | at Ernest Johnson's Friday night. | Miss Mildred Johnson spent Fri-! day night at the Tom Stewart home. | have the most beautiful limbs in the ‘oy Loomis and children of Mrs. R | thy Deuel, a member of one of the} | ish budget. Sterling. | who abruptly terminated the con- | versation at that point. Both Barrymore and Miss Costello DANCING WIFE have taken precautions to keep the \i jtime and place of their marriage a ID MINI TER i szrists, mystery even to friends |and studio executives. Neither has | | amplified Barrymore's brief writ- ten statement that he and the 22- year-old screen star were to wed, and that his second wife had ob- tained a divorce. ‘RICHEST CHILD’ SEEKS DIVORCE Chicago, Nov. 24.— (AP) — Mrs. Catherine Barker Spaulding, as a child was known as “the richest | Breadway Musie Show Star, Teaches Husband's Parish- ioners to Dance Chicago, Nov. 24.—(AP)--Doro- ster Teams” featured in numer-| ous Broadway music shows, is now spending much of her time teach- ing her husband’s parishioners in suburban Berwyn how to dance. Classes in tap-dancing for boys, | acrobatic dancing for children and ‘child in America,” has filed suit in superior court to divorce Howard Henry Spaulding, charging habitual drunkenness, The couple, who separated a month ago, were married in 1915. They have no children. Deuel and Mr. Rubel were; Mrs. Spaulding is the daughter married a year ago and came toland only heir of the late John H. Berwyn six months later. Mrs.|Barker of Michigan City, Ind., who Rubel believed she could make her|Wes one of the world’s largest man- musical comedy training pay divi-|ufacturers of railroad cars. dends to the church and immediately; Barker left a $30,000,000 estate. set about it. | Under the terms of the will the The Rev. Mr. Rubel produced two|daughter at no time d) ring her life music shows himself while a student! time is to receive the estate, but the at the University of Wisconsin. Jentire income from it goes to her. “Christians,” he said today, “haye|The trust terminates at her death, more right to dance tha: anyone.|the principal becoming part of her Heretofore they have been too pious. |estate, Dancing, which has biblical author-| Mrs. Spaulding, besides being ac- izaton, is a natural expression of ajtive socially, has been known for human being to rhythm in gesture.” he~ philanthropies, AMERICAN SS BEAUTIFUL QUEER COMBINATION New York, Nov. 24—(AP)—Beau-| Mexico City, Nov. 24.—They do tiful are American girls. McCelland| queer things in Mexico. For in- Barclay, artist, just back fromstance, you see straw hats, around Europe, says he can see more pul-| Christmas time, being worn with chritude in half an hour on Fifth| overcoats. The same thing can be avenue than in four months abroad. | seen in the hottest time of the sum- And Mme. Mihri Hanum, Turkish| mer. artist, who is visiting here, thinks All the blood in your body has to American women are miracles and a go through your lungs 2000 times each day. St. Michael and All Angels’ Epis- copal church are the chore the for- mer Dorothy Deuel has given her-| self to help her husband, the Rev.| Henry Scott Rubel, rebuild the aii | 1 world. which Col- onel Owen devoted his life,” Mrs.| udent of literature, | particular enjoyment in ench works. She spends much | her time in what she d | ‘little private researches” i y of congress, where she i3| ell known by librarians and at-/ cquainted with her liter. | Sterling o By MILDRED JOHNSON Emil Lang motored to Bismarck , Thursday morning. | The PT, A. held their regular meeting at the Sterling school Thi jay evening. Mrs. Oscar An- son and M John Lee furnished the program. e lunch was served by Mrs. George Kush and Mrs. Roy Turne: Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Johnson ac- companied by Mr. and Mrs. Carey Johnson motored to Bismarck Satur- cay. Jennie Clarke gave a birthday party for her daughter Violet Satur- day night. Violet was 21 yeais old | Sunday. The evening was spent by | dancing. At midnight a delicious | lunch was served. Everyone had a | very enjoyaole time. 1 Mildred Johnson visited at Will Stiles’ Wednesday evening. H Luella Tollefson, who goes to the Bismarck nigh school, spent the! Peskend at her home north of Ster- i Ing. H Mr. and Mrs. Tom Stewart accom- | Ranied by Mrs. Ray Loomis of | Steele and Mrs. Geo. Kush motored to Bismarek Saturday. Edgar Johnson is helping Max’ tae 9 for a few da The Purity Dairy representati-e | of Mandan was calling in this local- | ity Wednesday. | Mrs. Carey Johnsen visited at! Tyler Johngon’s Thursdey. | _ Mrs. Henzy Zuraff, who visiting in Miles City, turned home last week. Miss Grace Johnsor, visited at the Ernest Johnson home Friday night. Violet Clark visited at Tyler John- son’s Sunday. | Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dietzmann and daughier Mildred of Menoken visited at Carey Johnsin’s Tues- day morning and Ernest Johnson’s Tuesday afterrocu, Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Gosney and daughters Edna and Florence were shopping in Bismarck Saturday. Raymond Johnson visited at the home of his brother, Ernest Johnson, Sunday evening. Alfred French of Bismarck vis- has bees | +9 TO- | Celchrating PLYMOUTHS AntThanksaiving We Announce A Special Open House Week . ‘November 25 to December 1 It is entirely fitting that we should select the national holiday dedicated tothanks- pene record sales by the new Chrysler-bui Plymouth. and craftsmanship, and its freedom from old poate acne Se comple cer Suerte ke eokete new CHRYSLER g - Corwin-Churchill Motors, | Bismarck,N.D, | _ ; | morning, | Reporters and cameramen hoped to pick up Barrymore's trail at the | | New Auburn, Wis. wife filed suit for svg ee went to live with Mr. Heidelberger. five children. Trade Families in Wisconsin Mr. and Mrs. Edward Heidelberger and their six*children and Mr. and Mrs. William Brown and their five children were neighbors on farms near The parents, it seemed, couldn’t get along, so each The result; Heidelberger taking her six children to the hile Mrs, Brown took her brood of five and Everybody seems satisfied and the husbands remain the best of friends. Above are Mrs. Brown and _her To the left, below, is Mr. Heidelbergey. Brown are pictured to the right below. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1928 ranks of the Department of A; culture. He is Dr. Victor R. well, who has recently been ap- pointed senior horticulturist in the department. The chief reason for the increase in cold storage warehouse capacity is given by the Department of Ag. riculture as the necessity for ap ple storage in the northwest. The total increase for the northwest, in- cluding Alaska, California, Oregon and Weshington, is 29,431,259 cubic feet. so ; Cold storage facilities are stead- ily increasing. In the two years from 1925 to 1927, they increased 41,178,823 cubic feet, making the total space available 667,846,573 cu- bic feet. Meat packing establish- ments control 245,554,000 cubic feet of this space, private cold storage concerns 24,805,000 cubic feet, public \cold storage 273,896,000 cubic feet, and 66,314,000 cubic feet is con- trolled by packing establishments doing a >ublic cold storage business. ¢ soe The largest herd of cattle in the United States, free from bovine tu- berculosis, is one of 2600 pure-bred beef cattle in central Montana. Two other beef herds, each containing approximately 1060 beef cattle, have been found free from this disease. The Turkish horsemen of southern Siberia keep on their clothes with- out change till they literally fall off. the families simply swapped Mr, and Mrs. | Fundamental Principles of American Home Life Taught Stronger Sex Washington, Nov. 24.—(?)—The notion that home economics instruc- tion for boys “will develop them into cooks and seamstresses” has been exploded, and today 7,000 young men in 42 states ‘are being taught the fundamental principles underlying American home life, says the bureau of education of the department of interior. In Tulsa, Okla., a year of home economics instruction is required of boys before they may be graduated. In Denver, the home economies department has outlined a course entitled “Applied Economics,” which is elective by boys in the senior high school. So effective has the course Proved that the boys in the junior high school are urging a similar course for themselves, the bureau says. The Manual Arts high school of Los Angeles for a number of years has offered a successful course in home economics to high school boys. “It is now recognized that boys are called upon daily to select food either at home, in the school or in restaurants,” the bureau a family. “The greater part of the money 7,000 BOYS STUDY HOME-MAKING | SCIENCE; KILLS PETTICOAT THEORY are | the for c. | Another professor from the Uni-| that boys will earn through all their | versity of Maryland has joined the| lives after they become men will be spent in their homes. derstanding of the problems of those homes promises to be of constant practical value to them after they become men and acquire families. “It is also recognized that some phases of home economics education telligent eco goods and sympathetic participators in home and family life.” Seeliteemraremmaemet cemeoee i Federal Farm Facts | The farmer's savings bank in which the trees ol and grass seed now rather than wait! Agricultur poor | import : states. | factors have helped in boosting the “They often are required to buy! price of clothing, and later in their lives to | says Mr. Edler, “may well expect to{ build, purchase or rent a home and | pay more for practically all of these to be co-partrers in the rearing of | seeds than they did last spring.’ A proper un- needed for boys to become in- consumers of economic these your | spark plugs? » If your hs ipte look like this *| itmeans nian slow pick. 4 his| up, poor idling, loss of power waste of fuel. timber lot is capital and new growth the in- pet Ww. a Mattoon io pele | After a season's driving or 10,00( jest Service, Department o gri-| 1 9, -culture, says that timber lots Bae ae Ss in a new set of = often been the means to pay off} at will insure easy starting, fas: mortgages on farms and that farm-! pickcan Seaoouleoaide taes ers, instead cf paying taxes on idle| moteasiiceisengillon, lend, shou! , convert it into a) power, mo! Faria «i “woods bani | Insist upon AC Spark Plugs, sol se @ | Farmers had best buy their clover, bY best dealers everywhere. vices to lo pi ev, according to G. Ee ler of th: Si Department of; H production, weather conditions, smaller; winter killing and other} these _ seeds. “Farmers, AC Spark Piuc Compan) Fuint, Michigan ‘ | ; FOURS $595 - $775 SIXES , $725 . $1550 fob, Lansing ’ U DURANT FOUR DE LUXE SEDAN THE MOST LUXURIOUS . Low Priced Four HEDAHL MOTOR COMPANY City National Bank Building EEE Citar Ecol fi GAB les Ele eth SPECIAL FEATURES Quiet Bopies—exclusive Durant contruction. New ADVANCED body lines. New Brituant body colors More Roomy body interiors. GiroMiuM PLATING on all fittings formerly nickel plated. Tue Famous Million-Dollar four-ylinder Con- tinental Red Seal Motor of special Durant design, completely rubber mounted BENDIX QUIET positive four wheel-brakex. EXCEPTIONAL gear shifting and steering ease. 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