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} > OF STATE ENGINEER > PARED 10 $15,000 j THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Department Appropriations Reduced $40,000 for Next Bienn “Hj ALLOWANGE [SDE cans ———— uy cere cure J LEASING DATES SET FOR STATE SCHOOL LAND IN COUNTIES A SYNOPSIS OF 'THE NEW > oe WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1929 x ium POTATO HOLDINGS BY GROWERS ABOVE PRIOR LARGE CROPS ae, e e aie we w on inc Auditors Will Conduct Deals| .™ a 1 n { and 1 n n e | Quantity Kept Back on Farms é 0 Fl . + Less and Guaranty Fund Where Holdings Are Small, : : is 190,996,000 Bushels: be e ee inet | Staff Men Where Lara By Anne Austin 9,746,000 Last Year, = ” tela: 14 e | bibs ——_________ — i NEW RULE IS ANNOUNCED Faulty, lovable, struggling, human beings, every one of | riot of tun and is embelished with |MUCH FEEDING TO STOCK SCHOOL SHARE IS THIRD ay them a mixture of saint and sinner, are jhe characters tangy highlights, including & well ate x : daily chronicle of real life. “SAINT A INER” is largely | 88804 County Pair which looks ¥ 1 Fiuid Gidget, Auditor, Trensur- Department Wants to Break Up | concerned with the fortunes of three families: Bob Hathaway, ae ere Mi pe. | Acreage to Be Planted Will Bo : ae Mee Habit of Lapses to Obtain / and his young wife, Faith Lane Hathaway, their baby, Robin, | tween ene city, confidence and} 9 per Cent Below That : er and Railroad Commis- and their cousin, Crystal Hathaway; Nils and Cherry Lane Jon- | the country girl, with the contidence of 1928, Is Belief . ‘ 4 Cheap Renewals . * man a bit of backfire to (did c: sion Given More son, their sister, Rhoda, and Cherry’s baby daughter, Hope his ia crea pga j: : Dates for the leasing of all lands Wiley ; and the Tarvers—“Pat” and “Peg” d their da | situations, Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 23.— ; : = — artiter a » N. D,, Jan. 23.— 7, The departments represented in jown-d by the state school land board pn A Echt Crystal Hathaway, the cast is of the ac rted variety. aa ‘otato hg Pre state alates «the omnibus appropriations bill now have been announced here. In the aged 20 and 22, renew a college |he is too poor to marry, though he The Suggestion is offered that those on Junuary 1, 1929, Po nearly 10 sbefore the house will get along on counties where the land holdings of | friendship when Crystal comes to live |has proposed, and that she has re- | who like Sood clean, refreshing com- |ner ‘cent greater than the quantity $40,000 less this biennium than in the board are relatively small, the} with her cousin Bob and his wife,|fused to hamper his career. When |edy and the novelty of s young git! | hela on January 1, 1925, from the ithe last if the bill is approved as leasings will be conducted by the|Faith, and finds that the Tarvers | Pablo Mendoss actually proposes to|who is « natural comic with a style large 1924 crop and are nearly equal § county auditor. All such leasings|have recently moved into a rather | Crystal, the girl is panic-stricken, for | all her own, should be sure to see this “introduced. The budget board made gt = hi to the hoklings on January 1, 1923, ¢ H ; will be held March 15, pretentious Tudor cottage across the She finds that her pride is greater | laughter film. from the heavy crop of 1922, when qeecteases in'the Mestslcahinc odie Jn the countios where. the, board street from the Hathaway eae bee one Oe tale the total production wis 458,000,000 which ceed tl increases by id land, leasi: Serenity Boulevard, in. ie eg ‘ce t $40, eed wail ta Reid “ae the emery wemieoct Tarvers have become suddenly |the web of deceit which ha: || Legislative Calendar eve of oy enenine United % The bill asks approximately §$2,- office under the direction of a repre- | Wealthy, due to a lucky invention by Sy, ee "Sasa orion ,_femiatve Calendar | States Department of Agriculture, £000,000. It includes the state aid for sentative of the land department. mens ortigenrs Mitr iettin! Fat | clebrgere rach ait president of the NEW SENATE BILLS re-issued by Paul C. Newman, agri eschools, which is $686,200 or about The minimum price for pasture bile mechanic living on humble | Pruitt Hardware company. Her first , [cultural statisti for North Da- fone-third- of the budget, and the land ranges from $80 to $120, de- fh and Cherry | impulse is to go to Pablo, who loves |, & 2: Sperry: /kota. In actual bushels the present 4 sexecutive, legislative and judicial de- Pencing on ‘tie county. Lenses nay. | Biyitie erect: where matt nd Chetry (es to oe how humble he is |APpropriates $13,000 to pay salary |noldings are estimated at 180,055,000 4 $partments of the state government. finde for periods of one, three or PIN ie ‘evedi sudden money can | She finds he has gone back to Mexico, expenses of com bushels, compared with 99,746,000 " © The largest cut comes in the de- five years. spol! beautiful, gay, debonair Tony |leaving a heartbroken note for her {missioner for the next blennium.|bushels last year. spartment. of the state engineer, ©1229, ay me, A new rule promulgated by the Tarver. Tony, with her biack hair, | Pinned to a tree in the bit of woods emergency clause. In the 19 northern states where “whose budget was dropped from $46,- i Oe Fe Jend Asuartant is that atiy person | eet ne eas ee, Dime BE, Ore ty ieee happy. The| 8. B. 74—Sathre: vil- there is usually a surplus of old 2040 to $15,300 or more than $30,000.) , leasing land for more than one year /evmeua waite skin. body, attracts | git! twice attempts sulcide, but lacks | lages; towns, cities, counties or town-| potatoes for shipment, stocks on Jane SPhis comes in large part throagh the He fave, his friend's as good looking as you can expect to get on|may net permit hie lease to lapac and | TO as. ettortionaly Ge aie tenn: | the to die. Afraid that her |ships to establish’ master plans for 1 are estimated at 110,729,000 $act that ‘no appropriation is made) °° ™DO Cae” Ot _ then obtain bnew lease at the mine She. is. irrepressibly “gay, thrillingly |llee will be found out, end. stnauted and planning: - [bashels, compared with 88,603,000 Zor a geological survey, whereas $25,- ihe ee In some cases persons vital, generous to a fault, and avid of | Of having lost her job, Crystal pecks |sion to have charge of bushels last year, 104,000,000 on Jt was set aside for this in the last have leased land for five years. at | Httn Senerous adores ‘her father, | suitcase and flees from her oousins' | ment, control, location of industries |uary 1, 1925, and 118,000,000 Ja Siennium. No appropriation is made relatively high figures. They have happy-go-lucky, good-looking Pat | home, without leaving a note. Faith jor business house and make require-/uary 1, 1923. The report states tha dor an assistant state engineer, which then permitted the lease to lapse and » and helps extricate him from |@nd Bob, Tony and Sandy, Cherry |ments as to street linea Wout &p- Jin none of these states, except Penn- $makes an additional cut of $4,800. obtained new leases at the minimum a rather ridiculous entanglement with ; Jonson and her devoted almirer, Alan Ply particularly to cities. sylvania, are holdi exceptional, © The board lowered the state ex- figure when there was no one on/s designing woman, Mlle. Dumont. | Beardsley, make every effort to find S. B. 75—Public health committee: |but marketings have been slowed up Saminer’s budget from $136,580 to iU hand te bid up the price. Under the | ter mother, whom Tony impudently | the girl before putting the matter int Appropriates $26,000 to carry on in-|by the heav: production further 120,680, or a decrease of $16,000. new land department ruling, anyone | calls “Peg.” is a dowdy, dumpy, rather |the hands of the police "Ween e fant and maternity hygiene work now|south. In only a few areas have his represents a $10,000 decrease in Who relinquishes @ lease must pay | pathetic little nagger, who ‘cannot | ranéomn letter arrives, demanding that }done under appropriation from fed-|farmers as yet uatitieed any large travel expense for the department E T the bid price if he wants it bask be- adapt herself to the new life which | $5000 be placed in eral quantity of potatoes for feed. Stocks : ind a..$6,000 decrease in clerk hire. fore the period for which he original- on hand are much heavier in the a) Sibstasti! decreases in other de- ly leased it expires, * ‘ east and lighter in the western irri- Zuaranty fond commission, $8,100 t=) Trend to Study Latin in Prefer: | Six.W Ks School to Be Held] various counties in the state falon’ fo "Secticsent™ late inks nee tanty fund commission, $5,100 in| Trend to Study Latin in Prefer- | Six-Weeks joo! to ‘He oe cient” late potato states the eepartnent of public instruction, y Adams 16, Barnes 15, Benson 9, Bil- Ls 600 in the department of state and $3,790 in the retired soldiers fund of | the adjutant general’s department. Increases were made in the budgets of the land commissioner, which was raised to $65,470 or an increase of $10,690; the state auditors and state tréasurers offices, whose combined total was raised to $117,140 or an in- crease of $9,900; and the railroad commissioners’ department, which out in his annual ‘rej was raised to $135,050 or an increase ‘An increase of of $7,770. Ranking next to state aid for schools in the largest share of the auaeet is the qc department, with $235,900 divided between the supreme and. district courts—$140,- 000 for the district courts and $95,- 90@-for the supreme court. PEOPLE'S FORUM | AS SEEN AT HOME Walcott, Jan. 21, 1929. Editor Tribune: guages Shown Also Though the pop per cent. These increases o in the number of teachers. ! ° during the last year, Mr. ports. is not known, Page re- The reason for such a trend An encouraging in- ence to Modern Lan- ion of North Dakota has not materially increased in the last 20 years, the high school population of the state has shown an enormous growth, John A. Page, state high school inspector, points t. per cent in the enrolment in classified high schools of the state is shown in the last two decades, the report states. Almost double that percentage of increase is noted in the number of seniors in the schools, the increase being 904 have brought about a 412 per cent increase A trend toward the teaching of Latin and a corresponding decrease in modern language teaching has been manifest in the high schools * There This Summer, Says Education Dean Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 23.—@)— A new venture in education in North Dakota will be sponsored next sum- mer in a six-weeks school at the state institution for feeble-minded at Grafton, J. V. Breitwieser, dean of the school of education at the state uni- versity, who is in charge of arrange- ments, announced today. Courses in abnormal psychology, the teaching of subnormal children and social work with mental defec- tives will be given. The school will open June 17. Miss Lille Lewin, San Francisco, who has had charge of work for typical children there, has n secured to give part of the courses and to supervise some of the prac- tice work. A supervisor from Min- neapolis also is expected to assist in the school. Along with the courses will be a series of lectures by medical men, social workers and psycholo- lings 26, Bottineau 13, Bowman 15, Burke 18, Burleigh 5, Cass 15, Cava- ler. 18, Dickey. 15,. Divide 20, Dunn 23, Eddy 8, Emmons. 8, Foster 7, {Golden -Valley 27, Grand Forks 15, Grant 12, Griggs 15, Hettinger 13, Kidder 16, La Moure 15, Logan 12, McHenry 15, McIntosh 14, McKen- zie 29, McLean 5, Mercer 22, Morton 20, Mountrail 11, Nelson 15, Oliver 21, Pembina 15, Pierce 12, Ramsey 11, Ransom 15, Renville 22, Richland 16, Rolette 13, Sargent 15, Sheridan 6; Sioux 18, Slope 14, Stark 25, Steele 15, Stutsman 5, Towner 12, Traill 15, % Ish 15, Ward 8, Wells 7, and Wil- is 9. [Today in Conrow ] (By The Associated Press) WEDNESDAY House considers District of Columbia appropriation bill and senate first deficiency bill. House ways and means: com- prices, leaving a 1000 where production is usually insuffi- cient for local needs, stocks on hand are nearly 80 per cent greater than . |last year, or 9,000,000 bushels. This excess is relatively small when com- pared with the normal rate of con- sumy*ion in these states. 162,943,000 Bushels Produced The 35 late potato states in 1928, it is estimated, produced 420,891,000 bushels out of the total of 462,943,000 bushels for the United States. Of the 421,000,000 bushels, reports indi- cate that about 7,500,000 bushels were left und because of low lance of 413,000,- bushels actually dug. Of this quantity, 40,000,000. bushels are esti- unfit for food or seed, 4 mated to be sold for starch, or-lost from decay or shrinkage up to January 1. An- other 8,000,000 bushels of ma: wie quality are estimated to have n fed to live stock up to January 1, In a few areas, chie: ly from northern Wisconsin through Minnesota to North Dal kota, farmers have com- menced to feed quite heavily, and We have wallowed in the mire of | gat ae depression for eight long We have dreamt and thought, we have written and talked about farm relief. We have marched on Kansas City and through our repre- | Sentatives we have appealed to Con- | Gress for aid. But what have we done to help ourselves? Phis is Thrift Week. “Buy what thou hast no need of and ere long thou shalt sell they necessaries,” said Benjamin mittee holds hearings on tobacco tariff rates. - Senate interstate commerce committee continues with bill to Tegulate soft coal industry. some are planning to use for feed all potatoes now on hand. Lower prices this year have result- ed in a tendency on the part of grow. ers to hold larger quantities for food, and reports also indicate that the + |quantity saved for seed will average eight-tenths bushel per acre larger than last year. Deducting from the quantity grown, quantities , cals, left undug > leaves a balance ‘ 1,000 bushels available for crease in the teaching of home economics was made during the year, he states. An increase was made also in the number of pupils studying music. During the year nearly three per cent more students enrolled in the high schools than in the preceding year and a more than four per cent increase in the average daily attend- ance was recorded, according to the report. The number of seniors in- creased 6.6 per cent. Of the total enrolment there were 18 per cent more girls than boys. é Changes in classification of va- rious high schools in the state Mr. Page reports as follows: McClusky raised from second to first class; Reeder from third to second class; Douglas, Hazelton and Watford City, new schools classified as second class; Hoople, Killdeer and Rha: schools classified as third class. Forest River and Sur- Tey were dropped from the list of classified high schools. gists, For those who have the oper Preparation and who meet the re- quirements credit for the courses will be granted by the state university, Dr. Breitwieser said. Others can take advantage of the work as spe- cial students, “There is a movement in the state to train teachers who can take care of the unadjusted pupils and this six-weeks summer session has been organized in this field to meet a growing need,” he stated. Plans for the session have been approved by the state board of ad- ministration. REAL ROMANCE Paris.— At the age of 88, Abbe Geistitz, for years chaplain of Sante Crystal is ready to hurl herse!f into his arms... . . - but he does net love her, Peg and Tony clash constantly, as [do Peg and Pat, but Tony loves her ficiency roviding $24,-"— euiier a ae eee? time 000,000 e makes poor unhappy. ment. fer prohibition enterce- Her parents’ wane piseried life louse ways eans commit has given Tony a genuine anti-mar- ian canted Leanne on pil : Mie cee she calls it, when Mere eave report ola pe iin hee she hed hearer: this quantity, it is esti dian oe Hiedyincsa » grown up on Mpyrtle street and to : ‘ it 130,935,000 bushels Py bl a gp Oklahoma, at : }whom she has always confided every- 2 id ndicate farm. charges by Indian Commiedrnce.{ thing: She refuses to be stampeded ssi aces to live stock mor Burke that Pine complied cr. |into-# marriage with Richard War- 00,000 bushels of the quan. “destroy” Burke and Indian af’ |Fington Talbot, “Stanton’s most hand- ot rand this quantity wate ~. | some and eligible bachelor,” as one of reased iew of presen the society reporters describes him, House considered District of danger ay Plant 3,064,000 Acres rites to the notorious criminal Bolo] ‘The surface of Paris stréets requir. | eke love to her. Harry Blaine, a tates, acreage intended to be Pasha and many others, and received ing the attention of the public works this brilliant young reporter and play- “year will be nearly 9 veetaat, words: of the woman spy,/department of the'city sow amounts] W"SXt 1s also in love with, ‘Tony, but t less than planted last year Mata Hari. to more than 10,000,000 square meters. | OUT OUR WAY By Williams home, and signed by “Two, who mean edna ernest tha wan is “s reqi money not claimed. Horror: i gee ty ty +e fe 8 E il E ge is generously prevented from propos- ing, for Tony takes no joy in adding scalps to her belt. She tries to divert his -interest to her Crystal Hathaway. -* © ® Two girls could hardly be different than rts correctly indicate in- all growers, as has been . it iyo years, aa loss in acreage due to flood, etc., in first |left for harvest would be abc ans industrial |acres as compared with 3,361,000. gs i chum, i : i j : ' | tenend at what grown i taking a morbid Inguiy. made ye gy TOO MANY Hathaway will be : BACK SEAT page 10) ORwers, FER OnE THING } is ine tended acreage would produce around four hundred ‘million bushels for Indications of intended point to reductions in the ea: and also in V: Mai : a f eF