The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 1, 1929, Page 7

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MONDAY, APRIL 1, 1929 ; LL Agricultural College Trying Ex- _ periments in Glass Jars 3 to Solve Problems Fargo, , N. D,, April 1.—Flaming . y may soon be a thing of rsthti iat 5 ment No. B. Wheat straw was placed in quart glass fruit jars with soil in which straw did not decompose in the field. The same amount of straw and soil. were used in each jar. Water is ‘y they can expect of experiment work, and also how they may corduct inexpensive experiments lieved Entrenched at planes partaking the raid was hit by bullets, although Robles was the only one of the avia- tors who was struck. He died soon after landing at Mazatlan, the cas- “|at Dimas, about 18 miles south of La Cruz. REBELS LAUNCHING The federals, however, under the command of General Lazaro Car- ATTACKS FROM AIR) sete Mexican. Federals Are Doubly Watchful After Two At- tacks on Easter Day “Naco, Sonora, April 1.—(7)—A re- == PASSENGER TRAFTG THROUGH BISMARCK BY BUS TO INCREASE jion Line Expected to Boost Travel to the South From Western Canada TF a ga Fal cage fy ll ll ir WAPPENO~ Co even 18 Tee lier and other leading speculative } favorites. Bankers generally are of the opin- ion that the credit crisis has passed, although there is no immediate pros- pect of easy money rates because of expanding spring commercial and business funds, the huge sums still tied up on securities collateral, the coming state income tax payments and the federal reserve policy in seeking to obtain a sharp curtailment in speculative Total sales in the first half hour J. C. Oberg Is Named Company Supervisor of the Bis- AoTee AH ei ail or Raoios / EBB FLOOD DETAINS REFUGEESINTENTS OR OTHER HOMES Many Motor Parties Reconnoi- ter Fringe of Remaining High River Waters Refugees from the flood waters of the Missouri still are camping out on the higher ground back from the riv- er, the creeks and the inundated bot- tom lands. In a tent up from Ashbridge’s bot- tom and directly south of Fort Lin- coln reservation, a Peterson family is encamped. They have a flock of chickens, three calves and three goats with them. The family of Wendelin Fisher has taken refuge in Lincoln school on the road below the fort. Across the flood waters which linger in the bottom— their home stands isolated, and it will be some time before they can go back to living normally. Other families driven out and eith- er.camping in tents, scattered among other homes of the section or housed in the city are those of Oliver Millett, Nick Yokum, Otto Reamer, the Couches, the Stearns, Joe Buckmey- er, Mike Buckmeyer, a Meyers house- hold and the Hubers. Cattle driven out by the rising wa- ground, neighbors, where they will until further subsidence of the wa- ters permits return to the bottoms. PLAYS ROOT-HURST FORMULA AS NAIVE Bitter Opponent of Foreign En- tanglements Renews World Court Adherence Attack ‘Washington, April 1—(4)—Describ- ing the Root-Hurst formula as “naive” Senator Johnson, Republican, California, bitter opponent of what he regards as foreign entanglements, American attempt to adjust the differences be- tween the United States and the ‘world powers over the question of ad- visory opinions is held by the Cali- fornian to be “something entirely dif- ferent” from the senate’s reservation on that point. “In the report written b° Sir Cecil Hurst and so enthusiastically agreed to by the Geneva jurists,” he says. “The United States would join the court, and thereafter, if advisory opinions were sought, in which the United States claimed an interest, a protest might be filed which, if un- availing and still persisted in, might entitle the United States to with- draw from the court ‘without any im- putation of unfriendliness or unwill- ingness to cooperate generally for peace and good will.’ * * *. “If the United States enters the court induced by the delightfully artless proposal that it may withdraw, after a controversy concerning ad- visory opinions, it requires no pro- our people, ‘the opinion of the world,’ and the insistence of our own inter- nationalists, will keep us in.” PRISONERS PROTEST AS WARDEN RETIRES Convicts Shout and Rattle Doors as Snook Leaves Atlanta Federal Prison Atlanta, Ga. April 1—(?)—In the midst of protest by prisoners who beat upon their cell doors, whistled and shouted, John W. Snook left his post as warden of the Atlanta federal pen- itentiary late last night, carrying with him a “receipt in full” for all inmates, records and government property at the institution. On his last day in office, the war- den made public a letter he had writ- ten Attorney General Mitchell in which he defended his administration and expressed the hope that the prac- tice of “planting” department of jus- tice agents in the prison be abolished. The warden reported to the depart- ment of justice chief that his “only criticism of the Atlanta penitentiary is the overcrowded condition, for which the warden is not responsible. The morale, health, sanitation and physical condition of the plant can not be excelled by any other institu- tion of its kind in the world.” Lucas Window Display Attracts Attention By Blend of Colors The Lucas store is continuing its very pretty window display of Easter, the varying colors of which attracted so much attention. One window is in pink and orchid, another in green and gold, purple and white are other color combinaticns, along with rose and pansy. The dressing was done by E. A. Marcks. The combinations in which the goods rre displayed pro- duce a very rich effect. Editor Tostevin Is Celebrating Coming Out to Mandan in 1908 E. A. Tostevin was celebrating the twentieth anniversary of his coming to Mandan as owner of the Pioneer, from the Journal at , and a copy of the paper departure ago,” reminded him the change he made in 1908. Napoleon Girl Dies Here of Pneumonia Phillemena Gross, 17, of Napoleon, died in the city at 10:20 Saturday eumania. Raphael Gross, a farmer of Napoleon, where she-was born. Her exact age was 17 years 10 months and 22 days. The body was sent from the Capital mortuary establishment here to Na- poleon today for services and inter- ment, the arrangements to be made on arrival there. Realtors-Morris Real estate is real estate and that’s all there is to it under the law. f Grave Owners Are | > 2 M.. Snowfleld, state's attorney at Langdon, who wantei a bit of legal advice on the subject. ‘The question that troublec Snow- field was whether two men who had been elected assessors in his county could properly quality for the office. The law requires assessors to own real estate. One owned a lot in a cemetery and the other owned some town lots) on. which the taxes were only 88 cents. Morris cited legal decisions which held that the term real estate may mean anything from absolute owner- ship to naked possession, The quan- tity of real estate or any peculiar- ities as to its location make no dif- ference in interpreting the law, Mor- tis held. FLOOD SURFERERS PREPARE T0 MOVE BACK INTO HOMES Mud and Silt Prevent Immedi- ate Return; Estimate 5,000 Acres Ruined While other midwest and northwest states struggled with the raging ele- ments today, residents of the Missouri river bottoms prepared to return to their homes as Old Sol made life cheerful in return for turning loose the floods of the Missouri a week ago. Preliminary survey of the water swept bottoms showed that homes will be habitable in a few days, the waters having receded and the remaining evidences of the flood drying up. Deposits of mud and silt have made Passage in many parts of the bank lands difficult. Roads are still quag- mires and fields too soft for travel. Many families for miles up and down the Big Muddy on both sides of the river are living with friends; in tents and other temporary shelter. South of Bismarck, the Wendelin Fisher family is making its home in the Lincoln school. A family named Peterson is living in a tent nearby. A check today showed that, on the east side of the river, the families of Oliver Millett, Nick Yokum, Otto Reamer, Joe Ruckmeyer and Mike} Buckmeyer and_ families named Couch, Stearns, Meyers and Huber were driven from their homes by the water. O. W. Roberts, federal weather ob- server, estimated that 150 families had moved out of their homes in fear of the water. Some of these need not have moved, he said, but did so for fear of being trapped by a sudden rise in the stream. Estimate that appoximately 5,000 acres of rich farm land in the river bottoms was ruined by the recent flood of that stream here was made by Roberts. Roberts said the land is covered by logs, trees, mud and sand to such an extent that it would cost as much as the land was worth to clean it up and put it into production again. He esti- mates the average value of land so af- fected at $50 an acre. The bombs which were sent here by the federal vovernment for use in breaking the ice gorge which soaked the river and caused the overflow of the stream, were shipped ‘ack to the government ordnance depot at Sa- vannah, Ill, Saturday, it was said at Fort Lincoln, local army post, to which they had been concigned, Funeral Services For Pioneer Woman Of Minnesota Set Minneapolis, April 1—(4)—Funeral services for Mrs, Hans J. Dahl, 72, who died Saturday, will be held at 2 p. m., tomorrow at St. Lukes church, with burial at Crystal Lake cemetery. Mrs. Dahl came to St. Peter, Minn., from Norway in 1861, and to Minne- apolis in 1911. She leaves a daughter, Mrs. Fred D. Dell, Lewiston, Mon., two sisters, Mrs. Olaf Lokensgard, Minot, N. D., and Mrs. William Finley, LaFayette, Minn., and six stepchildren. Train of Tractors Goes Into Slope Area; 38 Cars Carry 152 The special train of International Harvester tractors arrived here ahead of time this morning. Instead of coming in at 9, it passed through here at 5 a. m. In all, there were 38 carloads of tractors for distribution through the Bismarck territory. Some went north- west to Killdeer, others west to Dick- inson, New Salem, Hebron and Dick- inson, and other cars --ent south- west to the Slope towns in the lower tier. With four tractors to a car, the train carried 152 in all. This is the second time the Inter- national has sent a full trainlosd of tractors to this territory. LU-GRIP RUMRIVALRY FATAL Wilsonville, TL, April 1.—(%)—Rum, rivairy was advanced by county aus thorities today as a motive for the slayings here yesterday afternoon of Frank Hines, 28, and his brother-in- law, Smith Tucker, 27, Wilsonville miners. The two men were shot to death as they drove into Wilsonville by &n automobile load of men. Northwest Actress Dies at Rapid City Jamestown, N. D., April 1—(?)— Word was received here today of the death last week at Rapid City, 8. D., of Mrs. Norma Maxwell, for the past six years with the Evans players, stock and vaudeville troupe: playing at_many towns in the northwest. Death was due to gangrene, Burial will be made at Waterloo, Ia., today, e Deal Promptly with Kidney Irregularities. i GP beat at possible un- less your are ly renee the walle imperkiss from your blood. For bladder irregularities and for the lameness, stiffness and con- stant backache due to sluggish kid- neys, use Doan’s Pills. $ To promote normal kidney ac- | er and baceushotd : in clean 0 lo. poisonous wastes, use Doan's Pills. Recom mended the world over. Ash your neighbor! 50,000 Users Endorse Doan’s: Pordog revmge Seger ey) many times at night to pase the kidnay ex- ae ie or enorme til T used ¥ coche the a diteuce bemeaste DOAN'S "2° ASTIMULANT DIURETIC 4% KIDNEYS Toster-Milburn Co. Mig Chem Buffalo. NY, Grimm Alfalfa Seed gistered fields, purity 08.4, germination 89. Free from noxious weeds. Affidavit of gen= uineness with each order. 36c lb. Faney Sweet Clover $4.35 ba.” ¢ $3.50. Ploneer White Dent lierm. 100%, $3 bu» 2%-bu. 82:75 bu; other varieties y higher: N. D. grown, state verified. Get bargain cir- cular No. 11, W. R. PORTER, Fargo, No. Dak. Dr. R.S. Enge Chiropractor Drugless Physician Lucas Block Bismarck, N. D. H. A. Mutchler 410 Fourteenth Street Bismarck, No, Dak. Representing The Northwest Nursery Co. Valley City, N. D. Specialists in Landscape Gardening Patrons of Promi- . ence Choose The Ansonia! - Ha The Byrne Agency has moved to Room 10, Little Building, iy ering

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