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FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1929 ere SC ANUARY 25,1929 ELECTRIFIED FARM OUTLOOK SEEN BY SKEELS AT CHICAGO Local Delco Dealer . Attends Company, Convention and Sees Latest in Light A word picture of the agricultural Anterica ‘f the future, with electricity taking up the slack in farm labor and in farm management, has been brought back by B. K. Skeels, local Delco-Light dealer, from the regional sales .convention of his. company which was held at Chicago. f “It was demonstrated at thc con- vention that this idea of a completely clectrified agricultural America is not a ‘visionary dream—it is a coming reality and will be brought much closer to actual existence during 1929,” the local dealer says. . The convention attended by. Mr. Skeels was addressed of the Delco-Light com! the ,eneral offices at Dayton, Ohio. H. W. Arnold, general tial field for rural electrification from individual electric plants which re- veals a vast need and desire for elec- a on the part of’ farming Amer- ica. One of’ the high points of the con- vention session was the announcement by Mr. Arnold that the Delcc-Light company has passed the 325,000 mark \n ‘production of individual farm elec- svic plants. . Twenty-five thousand Delco-Light plants have been made in the past 12 months. The previous 25.000 producticn: was attained in 15 months, ‘giving evidenve of the grow- ing demand for farm electricity. TRANSIENT AT LAKE GIVEN 5-YEAR TERM toe O'Neill Stole Mail Sack-at Leeds; Is Sentenced to State Prison Devils Lake, Jan. 25.—(?)—Joe O'Neill, aged about 25, transient, to- day. was sentenced to five years in the -federal penitenjiary at Leaven- Worth by Fedefal Judge Andrew Mil- ler after a jury had found: O'Neill guilty of stealing a United States mail sack from the Great Northern railroad station at Leeds last. sum- mer. While testifying for himself dur- ing the trial, O'Neill. admitted he. stole the sack, but said that he had been urged td do s0 by- another |’ transient while drunk, and. that the other transient then inform::. the Leeds authority of the theft.” -Most of the cases being tried be- fore Judge Miller and the jury con- cern violations’ of the liquor laws, ——__ NEBRASKAN URGE CORN DUTY RARE Washington, Jan. 25—(7)—An in- crease to 30 cents a bushel on corn duty was urged before the house Ways and means committee today by J. W. Shorthill of Omaha, Nebraska, secretary of the Farmers National Grain Dealers association. Shorthill contended that it cost the farmer 34 cents a bushel to move his corn to competing territory as against only 15 cents for Argen- tin:. corn and that this differential oo wiped out the existing uty. He also argued that motorization of the farm had decreased the de- mand for corn by 150,000,000 -bushels while this decline had been. partly met by an increased demand for corn by industrial alcohol manufacturers, Shorthill believed the demand would continue to. go down. He suggested a duty of 10 cents a gallon on indus- trial alcohol. 3 He added that the present corn duty was no protection whatever to electric interurban car during Men's Style Shop Will the business under new and favorable conditions. In the re incseased importa- tions from Argentina to the detri- cation. He will also display ment of the American grower. handily a larger outfit of men’s wear, patrons and easy to'select from. This graphic photograph, taken by mass of wreckage, shows where 19 Bellevue, Ohio. The accident occurri by the force of the crash. The BROXMEYER MOVES INTO NEW LOCATION Carry Ready-to-Wear Cloth. ing in Addition to Old Line John V. Broxmeyer was moving his men’s styles shop from the Wedge to 202 Fourth street, facing. the Grand | Pacific, today, where he will set up | toom he has. more space and better light, and he is surrounding it with & new color scheme and expanding on his line'of merchandise. The store will be known as “Broxmeyer’s.” In addition to the line of haber- | @lashery carried in the old stand, he will havea line of nationally ready- to-wear.men’s clothes in the new lo- within close examination of @ bli Now more new more neck- Where 19 Died in Grade Crossing Wreck @ camera man for The Daily Tribune and NEA S persons were Killed and many others injured ed at a grade crossing during bits and then straddled the wreckage containing a blinding snowstorm. the dead and dying. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ervice before all the victims had been removed from the tangled when a fast interurban car struck a Detroit-to-Pittsburgh bus near The picture shows how the intcrurban car smashed the bus to | Bus Driver, Hurled Through Windshield, Escapes Death Edward Butler of Cleveland, Ohio, driver of the ill-fated Detroit-to-! @ grade crossing near Bellevue, Ohio, Pittsburgh bus in which 19 were killed at miraculously escaped death when he was hurled through the windshield Governmental Study in North Dakota to Be Asked by Shafer Governor George F. Shafer is con- sidering the form of a bill for a com- ; mission to survey the entire structure | of government in North Dakota, both state and local, with a view to sug- gesting economies in the administra- tion of public business. The k-ll probably will provide for @ commission to work between the close cf this legislative session and the beginning of the next and report to the 1931 session: The governor's plai is to give this commission broad powers | authorize it to examine into county, | township and municipal affairs as i bill, an appropriation measure for the well as those of the state government 80 that the entire goverinental struc- ture of the state, from the lowest to the highest unit, would come under scrutiny and be subject to the com- mittee’s secommen ‘ations. (CANADIAN CURLERS bove picture shows the shattered windshield. The bus was struck by a fast Inding snowstorm. The interurban is shown in the background of this picture. EIGHT BILLS PASSED INSENATE INCLUDING FIRST BILL OF HOUSE jeau ition of State Teachers Fund Explained to Commit- tee by Miss Palmer 1 ay Eight bills were passed by the senate today, including the first house and to North Dakota Children’s Home So- ciety at Fargo. The Brant bill permitting special school districts to conduct schools in more than one place, passed in the senate. Other bills passed were an appro- priation bill of $7,908.91 to the es- cheated estate fund; $8,000 for the care of feebl minded persons whose residence canot be determined; the |bill increasing the pay of budget tests just completed by Lola Trusty, director of physical education. Boys in the sixth grade had the highest average, 90.2 per cent. Girls in this grade made 88.5 per cent. In the other grades boys ran from a jfraction of one per cent to four per | cent above the girls. A three fold test was used, includ- ing marching exercises and standing. Protruding heads, round shoulders | And protruding abdomens were prin- jcipal faults found with postures of | | pupils. ‘BIG GAME HUNTRESS "AWAITING SENTENCE FOR SHOOTING MATE | Husband Says Shcoting Was Accidental After He’ Had Threatened His Wife | | | New York, Jan. \—Mrs. Es- ther Evans de Forest Wilson, big game huntress, was in the Jefferson Market womens prison today await- jing sentence for shooting her hus- band, Dallett H. Wilson, lawyer. A jury in general sessions court yesterday found Mrs. Wilson guilty of assault in the second degree and recommended mercy. She was re- manded for sentence Tuesday. Judge Nott in discharging the jury observed: “Your verdict was in conformity with the facts and the law. The excuse that when a woman shoots she then ‘forgets has been given too often in the past.” Wilson, shot in his Fifth avenue office-last March 29, appeared as a {reluctant witness. He testified the shooting was accidental and said he had threatened her with a paper- weight. Mrs. Wilson faces the alternative of two sentences. One calls for a maximum of five years in prison and a fine of $1,000 and an additional term under the Baumes law of five to ten years for using a pistol. The other calls for an indeterminate peni- tentiary sentehce of six months to three years. At her trial she testified she did not remember firing the shots. She had been separated from her husband since September, 1927. Wil- son lay in the hospital in a dan- gerous condition two months after the shooting. than 7% ver cent.” To find other- wise would ‘be to di est courts of the nai asserts. The application for the increase in Minneapolis was asked by the Minne- apolis street railway company. which like the St. Paul company, is a sub- sidiary of the Twin City Rapid Transit company. An application is ‘also bending before the commission for in- creased fares in Bayport and Still- water, filed by the Minneapclis, St, Paul, suburban railway company, a third subsidiary. FILIBUSTER ABSENT AS VOTE ON CRUISER SENATE BILL NEARS PURTHER REQUESTS | FOR HIGHER TARIFFS FOR FARM AlD MADE National Poultry Council Offi- cial Pleads for Protection Before Committee Weashigton, Jan. 25.—(}—Further requests for higher tariffs on cattle, | dairy and farm products were received | by the house ways and means com- mittee today on resumption of its | hearings on tariff revision. Knox Boude of Sebastopol, Califor- nia, representing the national poultry council, urgéd an increase to 10 cents a pound in the existing duty of three | cents on live poultry and 10 cents on dead poultry as compared with the present rate of six cents, Other rates ! Proposed were: Eggs in shell, 10 cents a dozen as against the present 8 cents; frozen eggs 12 cents a pound | against 6; dried yolk 30 cents against | 18; dried albumen 60 cents against 18; baby chicks 4 cents each, a new duty; and live poultry imported for breeding purposes $2 cach, also a new rate, Boude argued that growing imports made the higher rates necessary to equalize foreign and domestic produc- tion costs, but committeemen cited figures showing these were not so! high. Representative Bacharach read tariff commission figures showing im- ports of live poultry were only three tenths of one per cent of domestic Production and Representative Gar- her, of Texas, ranking Democrat on | the committee, congratulated the w ness “on learning from the manu- facturers how to ask for tariff rates.” TWIN CITY STREET CAR FARES RAISED Order Finds ‘Reasonable Return on Fair Value Is Not Less Than 7 per Cent’ Would Be Powerful Instru- ments for Peace Moves Washington, Jan. 25.—?)— After having had the proposed measure be- fore it for nearly a year, the senate has taken up the cruiser bill in a spirit that makes its supporters hope- ful that a final vote is nearing. Chairman Hale of the senate naval affairs committee, in charge of the | bill, was so optimistic today as to be- lieve a final vote would be reached by Saturday night, but other senate leaders felt that another week will be necessary to end the debate. Those advocating passage of the measure have taken heart at the ab- sence of any indications of a fili- buster. but they were mindful of the admonition of some opponents of the bill, that any attempt to rush the legislation through would not be tol- erated. Brookhart Wins Point Senator Brookhart, Republican, Towa, one of the middle western group of senators opposed to the bill, ob- Jetted successfully yesterday to the request of Senator Hale for an open- ing of the discussion at 11 o'clock, | rather than the usual noon hour. Brookhart advised Senator Hale that it would be better to take amyic time in considering the measuree, and the committee chairman said he had no Opposition to a full discussion. For the first time since the bill be- came the regular business before the jSenate a full discussion was heard yesterday of the place the cruiser bill Would take in any efforts of the St. Paul, Jan. 25.—(@—Street car fares in both Minncapolis and St. Borah Declares New Cruisers | the highs | that onter Then ALL-BRAN lief in 2 er ety Recommended It Constipation is dreaded not fon We seen tnsidicns oa, eae Ee, rept the aad serious meg yo | and diseases it causes. Mr. Lind was a sufferer—but read how he found relief. f° have ioaligadl from plloe, "At times T have been unable to work. I have tried suppositories, olnt= ments, etc., but to no avail. “Two months ago my grocer called my at~ tention to Kellogg's ALL-BRAN, I began taking it regularly. Immediately the pain and annoyance from’ the piles was relieved. I found that it requires very little ‘RAN Don’t neglect constipation. At any time its poisons may take terri- ble toll from your health and well- being. Protect yourself. Eat Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN regulatly— two tablespoonfuls daily, of in chronic cases, with every meal. ALL-BRAN cee sure, natural relief. It is what doctors call a bulk food. It sweeps the intestine clean and stimulates normal action. Ready-to-eat with milk cr cream. Also try the recipes on the package. Results guaranteed. 1 ‘8 recom- mend it because it is 100% bran. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Served in hotels, restaurants, and dining cars. Sold by all Ln) — Sw. CEE Paul were increased effective Satur- day to 10 cents cash or 6 tokens for 45 cents in an order filed today by the Minnesota railroad and ware house commission. Transfer condi tions remain unchanged. | bil. a provision for the calling of an The fare as it relates to Minne- | international conference to restate apolis represents final disposition of |the law governing the rights of the application for an increase while) neutrals on the seas during the war. that for St. Paul was fixed et the Powerful Peace Weapon same rate by stipulation pending a The Idaho senator declared that the separate review of an application for | cruiser bill could be made a power- an increase there. ful instrument whereby the United This was done, the commission said, | States might be able to force naval because it would be “manifestly un- | disarmament upon the other powers fair” to give St. Paul a lower fare | of the world; but to do this, he con- than Minneapolis pending disposition | tended, it would be necessary to clim- of its case. jinate from the measure the “time Minneapolis application was heard | clause” by which construction of the in December while the St. Paul case | ships would be started within three is scheduled to be heard. Monday. years. Elimination of this clause, The order was signed by Commis- | Borah asserted, would give the presi- sioner F. W. Matson and C. J. Laur-|dent a powerful weapon to demon- isch. O. P. B. Jacobson, chairman of | strate the sincere wish of this country the commission, refused to sign the | for further disarmament. order and a dissenting opinion prob- He warned the senate that to make ably will be written later. disarmament possible the law of the ‘The order finds that a “reasonable | seas would have to be reconstrued, return on the far value” of the strect | saying that complete freedom of the car company’s property is “not less Was & necessary adjunct to dis- THE AFTERMATH of influenza, bronchitis, cough, cold or other respiratory infection, is usually a period of great weakness. There is special need for well-selected vitamin-rich nourishment to rebuild resistance. Many people have found nothing quite so beneficial as SCOTT'S EMULSION OF PURE VITAMIN-RICH COD-LIVER OiL If you are now passing through a time of weakness, why not let it help nqurish you back to strength and vigor. Scott’s Emulsion is cod-liver oil that is pleasant to take and digests easily. ‘Scott & Bowne, Bloomfeld, N. J. United States to advocate further re- duction of naval armament. Discus- sion centered around the speech of enator Borah of Idaho, who pro- | posed that there be written into the & The color scheme of the-store will be black, with gold and Chinese red tr . The window fixtures will be in gold bronze. The store was not fully moved to- day, byt it already was doing busi- hess, with the prospect of’ putting ¢ lot of trade life into Fourth street as moving is completed and the increased the, new’ propor- tions ‘intended. Grand Forks Man NORTH DAKOTA 190 PAR DATES CHOSE the. North Dakota fair circuits and independent fair associations were e in arrangement of Minot, Jan. 25.—(): With two events of the Minot bonspiel con- cluded, a third will be finished this evening when Phillips of Weyburn, Sask., and Anderson of Griffin, Sask., meet in the final game of the fifth event for the First National bank y. In the third or international event, which was won by Canadian rinks, of Portal, Mead of ‘Ogema Portal have reached the FINALISTS AT MINOT members to $10 a day each; and the Tofsrud bill providing for refunds to hail tax purchasers in cases where land sold by the state is returned to the state. Senator Whitman, Grand Forks county, introduced @ bill appropriat- 1 ing $15,000 to complete. the construe: tion of the Grand Forks bridge across the Red river. a The appropriations committee of- fered a measure. permitting it to fix the salary of the executive officer of the state livestock sanitary board. Senator Hamilton, Renville county, We wish to extend invitation to witness Come to any performan To the Gold Star Mothers of America "FOUR SONS" as our special guests. to you a cordial the photoplay ce you choose. No Faces Charges of introduced a bill permitting the at- ticket or card will be necessary, Caprroh THEATRE Tonight and Saturday. In the Shadow of the Law A Strange Wooing of the Underworld SENSATION- AL THRILLS! Mystery - Breath-taking Situations - anda Great Romance Also ; Stan Laurel, Oliver Harding ; ‘ in 4 “Early to Bed” Latest, News Pictures In What Month Is Your Birthday? Merely mention to the doorman that you are a Gold Star Mother and we shall be glad indeed to extend this small service to you. THE CAPITOL THEATRE Phillips to deter- | torney general to dispose of property finalist, \ confiscated by law enforcenient agents vent, all comers, won | upon order of the district court. rinks, finds hagticd in the nied Ngee the Litas bie th MoCannel, Piper, Lang, | maki &@ minor amendment to Lambert in the eights. | pharmacy law, and the Ettestad bill, ‘and Mowbray are back in the | Siving legislative nominees the right 6's. _Kermott advanced this morn-|to name representatives on county by beating Dahl, 18 to 6, while | political: committees, the senate Piper reached the eights by dropping | Passed its first house bill. It was a Davis, 12 to 6. measure appropriating $10,000 for the Pringle and Buck of Minot reached | North Dekota Children’s Home so- the fours in the sixth event for the | clety at Fargo. Russell - Reckless Driving Grand Forks, Jan. 25—()—Carl Danner, 68, Grand Forks, testified in When your Children Cry |x cop Pr for It , 12 to 10, ‘Buck meas- |Tetirement and pension fund was ex- a eee plained to members of the house and| Baby has little upsets at tims:, All Senate education committee this after-| your care cannot prevent them. But by Miss Bertha Palmer, 5 you can be.prepared. Then you can do what apy experienced nurse would psi, fe doops ef pinta you ive a few t pls Cestoria. No.sooner done than Baby is soothed; relief is just a matter of moments. Yet you have , child: without use of a Pe E s Furnished: or unfurnished seven room home, four bedrooms, all modern, well located, also heated garage. Immediate possession. For further information, write Ad. No. 86 in care of the Bismarck : Tribune. — - E Hi z i: 2 8 ti i a i i § | R i 5