The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 17, 1929, Page 2

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= . THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Northwest Crop Acreage This Summer to Be Million Above 1928 - , FEDERAL RESERVE ||_S!DEGLANCES - - - - By George Clark _||STATE LIVESTOCK PARDON BOARD SEES REPORT FORECASTS Toe IN GOOD CONDITION 100 APPEALS AHEAD GREATER PLANTING AFTER HARD WINTER nies an Foy’ Pogbatiing | Filed So Far; Meeting Oue Agricultural Incomes Have Not Rainfall: Deficient Since Sep- Missing Boy and Alleged Abductor Oe Fee gah 4 Here on June 3 ©1929 By NEA Seavice bx. seein + e tions under Been Up to Record During tener; Grass (ee | Re ois (eae ae ciaaeepeee ° Ranges in West End < STEPHEN ARMITAGE when he x * * June 3. This is a day later than the the Month of March rescues her fox fur from a thief time set by law, but June 2 falls on CATTLE HAVE GROWN THIN! Meta supsor, deurnier, £ y told MIXED FARM AREAS THRIVE elt aa onus daughter of Mit- ed elas oes haa ae told Check Clearings Trace Busi- ness Activity to Their Cities; Building Values Short away from her. Then HUCK |Plaints against her they feared she ges ie Severe on Herds] CONNOR. becomes infatuated was getting a _Feputation among the in Montana, with Pamela and she amuses her- an ined servants o! BNE, an Shee ee ce itt beitmes’ [being a hard taskmistress Nothing Is Heavy Among Ewes Pamela’s brother, HAROLD, is | but fear of losing the girl restrained in love with Mildred but suspects | Pamela from physically that she cares more for Stephen her for her small offense. All North Dakota livestock {s in} than for him. He begs her to go |. But at least she could indulge : 7 | good ‘condition for this period of the t «“ ” governor, is secretary of the . aa es Ss G, Newman, agricultural eatsician.| EUmnInK crowd, Mudre’s motte |e Pee, eee ts te naam wpe od about the same margin which has No feed shortage 1s reported in any Stephen hears about it and comes | {ter @ second wearing.” 2 Hear Weber ‘Again prevailed in other recent months, ac- Eat apuse nue atcyer tees alas HA ain feeling regret his long oan point the maid dared to 3 tarted bbe si “ : x raed Reerve Dank at talneaple. The Temperatures in North Dakota| Mer Cunt Suuures’ yer efetes [cannot press pin ‘pleats in chiffon c be gerep cA ahead daily average of debits to individual ranged from 6 to 8 degrees above miss,” she said in a half-: 33 * Beulah, N. prevents him from keeping the a a scared, half: ¥ Dr. accounts at 17 cities was 10 per cent larger than in N.arch a year ago. ‘The greatest increases in individual debits were shown at South St. Paul, Min- neapolis 1nd the cities in the mixed farming region. The country check clearings index was also 10 per cent larger in March than in the same month last year. The increase in this index was greatest in the eastern half normal during March, in direct con-| Gate, Pamela Step! at |defiant tone. Pamela had just about expert, lecture ao to below-normal temperatures} ‘Mildred is viens to mearry "ner gone too far with her. here of Beuleh ape’ » r in the preceding two months. Precipi-| brother for his money. Stephen “You can, or you can_ leave,” tation during March averaged ‘above defends her and Pamela is furi- | Pamela seid uncbmpromisingly. “You normal for the entire state. For the! ous She cables her father and | Were told in the beginning that all six-months period, September to Feb-} has Mildred discharged. my things were to be: pressed after ruary, inclusive, North Dakota rain- Harold sends another message |C®8Ch wearing. And don’t permit the fall was 25 per cent below normal,| 49 his father, asking him to rein- chambermaid to turn back my bed; with the greatest deficiency in the] ctate the girl but to no avail. He | She doesn’t know how to arrange the = = = western half. There is sufficient offers to help, but Mildred asks pillows.” of the district. moisture in the soil to give crops a} him why he fears Huok. He re- “Very well, miss,” the maid mur-|when 4-year : ‘The valuation of building permits ood start in all sections of the’ state.| fuses to tell her but saya he ap- |mured quietly, but her fingers trem-| above, ‘and Joseph ‘Urban below, & granted during March was 25 per cent “That reminds me, I must get some shock absorbers put on this car.”| | For the 17 western range states,|- preciates her sympathy. bled as she adjusted Pamela's gar- ni u . smaller than the valuation recorded in . eth » livestock is beginning to Pamela succeeds in poisoning |'€'S. “Shall I wait up for you?” ., disay boys, Orville Chilson and Her- March lact year, Freight carloadings in | per cent and 11 per cent, respectively. j states—Minnesota, Montana, North | S00W, the bbb of a severe winter! Stephen's mind against Mildred Certainly. You don’t expect me to| taneously, detectives began a search |bert Kittler, sang a duet on the pro- the first four weeks in March were 6|The 10-year average yield of barley | Dakota and South Dakota: — iil end tartina feeding. Spring feed} and the latter faces dreary days | C®!! in someone else, do you? = per cent emaller than in the corre- | was 23.4 bushels per acre. If a yield late in starting. of searching for work. But-Huck | | Pamela was critically viewing the | tickets on the Leviathan: for the boy __ sponding weeks last year. Department |of 23 bushels per acre is realized on Feed Crop Acreages es petite ts so persistent that Pamela | tre ag stein ies, (0. cee that |and himself. He had taken out pess-| Stanton Co i | store sales and flour and linseed | the intended barley acreage, the 1929 i i anges in western North Dakota! thinks out a plan to dispose of | they tan straight up her well-formed | ports. for Poland, his native country. nm Community, product shipments were in smaller | production in cur four states will be Intentions Harvested {CTC Clear of snow, but grass has not) him. Se the Anerley gapering less that |‘Since kidnapping on the high seas! Rally Comes May 23 volume than.a -ear ago. tmore hen a million bushels greater | pour states fy 3 tif nbintia gates} al Ted ae * ee ghey Bua ete at own. : might come under the shanghaling 3 es May an the huge crop harvested in 1928. ep i * ve uth Da-} now: Funs in mi; expected 16 Per Cent Income Less Tt is Interesting to note that the in| United States. 75.5 758 Jokta, late snowstorms have held back | NOW:GO ON WITH THE STORY | new stockings.” Paihela warned, mov-| ints the Sands’ at ich ‘puthorites. (Special to The Tribune) : Farm‘income from cash crops and! tended barley acreage in the rest of | The United States department of ranges, but spring prospects are good. CHAPTER XX ing toward the door to her sitting hogs combined was estimated to be |the United States is 2 per cent less |S#Ticulture’s report on the condition | Montana ranges are late in starting| pamela had promised to have din- |00m- | “I mean those runs that spoil] @_ i m 16 per cent smaller in March than 11 |than the acreage harvested last year. |! Winter wheat, issued April 9, states | growth. Reserve moisture is less than sf Aud ien cha haa them for me but don’t get down too “ the same month last year. The re- that the April 1 condition of all_winter |jast year. In Wyoming ranges are| Ct With Huck. Ani Aes far—you understand.” I AT THE MOVIES | : cent increase in the price of hogs Spring Wheat Increase wheat was 82.7 per cent, compared with | supplying little or no food, and pros-|made a date with Stephen for the} She went out and left the maid| ~_ ° | brought the median price at South| ‘The third largest increase intended | 68.8 per cent last year and the 10-year | pects are for a late start. same night. shaking with suppressed anger, but St; Faul ‘up to $11.25 per hundred: | was in spring bread wheat of 9 per |SVergee of 809 per cent. Referring) For the range states, generally,| «wait for me in the lobby near the | Pamela forgot her before she reached ete an ‘a weight in March, as compared with | cent, or 1,000,060 acres. The intended | t° the Lage Minoan ne range prospects are favorable. In the| main elevators,” she had told Huck. the elevator. She glanced at her} Fiattery continues to be woman's $7.90 per huncredweight a year 980. | decrease in durum wheat, however, | "Port states: hile too cated “ X /northern half of the area spring feed | “Seven-thirty, sharp.” tiny wristwatch and saw that she As @ result, the income from the sale | was even greate:—1 1-3 million acres | definite eure Leta of the ae will be two or three weeks later than| while. to Stephen she had also said | W@5 # few minutes late for her double of hogs during March was estimated —making the intended total spring eet mee tl ne Eh ped veonae 3 usual, that she would meet him in the lobby appointment. to be nearly $3,000,000 Jarger than ied wheat acreage in these four states | APT Le od at ie aa RURtaterike 2 Cattle near the main elevators at seven-thir-| All the better. She should have income from this source in ee + | slightly less than was harvested last oe per cent loss from winter K- | Cattle in western North Dakota are! ty on the minute. made them wait longer; it would 1928, in spite “Ae peer poles as year. Even if the entire intended re- gi abandonment figure used in |i" 800d condition, though somewhat | At seven twenty-seven she gathered have been more ‘effective. But she wursday, The estimated income 1" ¥ | duction in durum wheat acreage is th; ti Fethe winter Wwhikat below one year ago. March weather | the cointreau velvet wrap her maid didn’t want tq irritate Stephen. He| subtly and effectively, according to) Fred products during February was 17 Pet lrealized, the acreage devoted to this |the Preparation of the winter, Niear | WS reported favorable, except in the | held for her about her shoulders, took | W@sn't_s0 deeply in love with her | Adela Rogers St. John, writing in the | Frank -eent (= setae ern sea sro wil still be nearly 10 per cent selena atone ¢ 10-year | southern districts. In western’ South|up her small, silver vanity bag, and Ebr taer not grumble when she this-source ! of larger than the average for the period . a an Dakota stock-is a little thin and losses| turned for a last inspection of hei ee prices of wheat, corn, oats, ‘arley,| 1919-1928, The intended acreage of | The condition of rye on April 1'WAS) have been somewhat above aver: 5 a eB se & rye, potatoes and ewes were itil all: spring wheat was about 1,000,000 penorted tore per Pier tewen Liberal feeding | was sheets ae in Renna o wcheeat moe than a year ago. The prices of el acres greater than the average for with 0. soestit laa a le 10-year’) March, due to heavy snowstorms. In|side of her dressing-room before e stepped imperiously through hens, eggs, butter, ee (Galves:| the same 10-year period. average of 85.2. Montana the winter was hard on. starting for her meeting with the two | ‘He bronze doors and saw in a glance ons ae lambs were higher ion eee Teale ear Value of Farm Products Marketed cattle, but losses have not been heavy.| young men, each of whom believed |that both Stephen and Huck were ee . , e ed supplies will be fed up close. i hour. | there, standing faring . ‘ 2 Million More Acres in Crop other ‘feed grains—corn and oats and March 1929 March 1928 | Cattle are thin in Wyoming, due to Ene EA vonieeng ahous that off: each jin in 0 a aus . : un One million more ‘icres will be injtame hay—showed increases in our | Bread Wheat. $ 7,215,000 -$13,345,000 j the severe winter and prolonged feed-| white shade of her wrap when she Both Pe! 3 ‘was subtle, crop this season than last in the north- | four states, with the result that the}Durum Wheat. 5,468,000 4,571,000 |ing. Losses have not been heavy, on| bought it, thinking that pure white or road men moved toward her as she | sweet, individual. Her art was to know west, if farmers in the four states | total area intended for feed crops 1s | Rye 556,000 1,596,000} the whole, but some localities report |a color would have been more daz- pe i oe drew her wrap tighter /how and when to apply it and in —Minnesota, Montana, North pee nearly 2,000,000 acres greater than | Flax 707,000 428,000 | losses heavier than usual. Heavy ship-| zling, but now she was pleased with eats ee re mela -amiled (up /at ipeienat ee and South Dakota—carry out ies last year. t Potate 2,678,000 5,114,000 | ments of feed continue. it, and the particularly alluring swirl me, ane ty ea seemin; to see ‘She had a ‘line,’ however. Every “apegeerengéd tea oeeareane of Cut in Cash Crops Hogs . + 12,983,000 10,128,000 For the western range area, gener-| the coiffeur had worked into her|to be 4 ssp poosgee had no mind} woman has a ‘line’ of some kind. |to ' ‘to the United States Depar c Feb. 1929 Feb. 1928 | ally, cattle show the effects of a hard | smooth hair. and. bowed stavers, ‘Wood before her | But every woman today should know ‘Agriculture his, js an increase, of Ee a aycetoded (wheat. Dairy Products $20,258,000 $17,808,000 Winter, though still in fairly good con-| She put up a hand to touch it light- | nis sewed sravely, then he offered sree geriget Soir te ” Q ition. Losses, however, have been no| ly and the jangle of her many brace- 5 iplicity , yet few one snl), F 120000. |p alllion meres dees than 8) year |4G0-| Fi larger than usual. In Nebraska and| iets filled her cars with, delightful parethen iso offered his and | women today remember it. ‘The : an increase of about 1 per cent. Total cash crop and total feed crop Today in Congress Texas a good calf crop is reported. | music. pers It. gzuen Huck spoke ; obtain total acreage figures, average | acreage figures are given in the ac- Sheep "/eNStevo, as she sometimes called |" ® low, restrained voice. “Haven't | of the world.” ; winter abandonment has been de- | companying table. Sh in wi ; you made a mistake?” he said. “Or A Rom achal fall: plantings of rt @ eep in western North Dakota| Stephen, would have a Lard time re- |have 1?.- You see, I understood 7 eee . poms Beanies tie tea tkeres lankedicrooe sicoen, fee, aeah (By The Associated Press) have wintered in good condition. With | sisting her tonight, she thought. Even | say you' would meet me here { “rte! Barrington \ «Minter wi i DA eWAvE. bees lnc | Gate: «barley, intend’ ad Harv'st' d WEDNESDAY favorable range and feed prospects| her perfume was more beguiling than ner.” pelea i ages sown for 6) Se Saige ry AGscen House agriculture committee re- | they will soon. pick up in flesh. Losses | usual; something her father had sent Pamela ti oA Ramu ages ered enc, vended erelitine Monae 8° | ports its new farm bill. have not been heavy. In Montana | her from Paris with an admonition tol‘ypon him. “Did I semtnne oe ase e large: ng . Senate agriculture committee |sheep did not stand the winter as| use it sparingly as it was priceless. | har, really?” she said in barley and flax, increases of 145|/North Dakota sand 32423 305a1| continues its discussion of farm | Well as cattle, and losses were some-|. At first Pamela’ had thought thie ly. ST é “You did,” Huck answered quiet!: ie 2 relief. what heavier, especially among old| gift nothing more than a string of | « uietly, ; Weather Report 3 Cash Crops (All 314.265, 212,808) “senate judiciary committee | ewes. In Wyoming sheep are thin and| imitation pearls which she tossed an- pr erenp to lpr tape o flash wheat, rye, flax, po- considers investigation of right of | breeding ewes are only in fair con-| grily aside with a mental note to tell glance. “Be good enough to Print eae Secretary Mellon to hold office. dition, A large part of the feeder] her misguided parent precisely what ) oe Montana, lambs have been contracted at 1114 | an outraged daughter thought of him ‘a objections to me,” he said curt- North Dakota, South TO FEEL GOOD ON ARISING! | to 12% cents. in her next letter, or scribbled note, to)“ Huck returned ‘wt Lowest: Dakota vs 23,904 24,704]. It is glorious to awake with a live-| For the range states, generally,| be more precise. si lance Precipitation to 7 a.m. . 91] United States ...... 69,538 67,714 | 1Y. healthy, energetic body. It is mis- | sheep show a slight shrink in flesh. * * * ‘My Highest_wind velocity _ 200 i fe erable to drag a stiff, aching, weary|In Colorado, Nevada and Oregon 4 ‘The growing importance of the live | body from a restless, sleepless bed. | losses are reported among the range| _, But even before her anger had sub- stock industry in these four states is|Mr. August Strandell of Sister Bay, | sheep. In Nevada a reduced lamb crop| Sided she had made an interesting clearly shown by th- constant in- | Wis. knows. He wrote: “I took Foley |is expected. Very little wool has been| discovery. A whiff of odor so delicate crease in area planted to feed crops. | Pills diuretic and before long I threw | contracted, but a considerable per-| that it seemed it couldn't have come While figures for the United States | away my crutches, freed of my trou- | centage of the feeder lambs are con- | {£0™ any earthly flower wafted up to show virtually no change in the pro-|ble. A returning twinge sends me|tracted at from 11 to 121% cents, | Her 8 she lay on the cushions of her portion that feed crop acreages are | back to Foley Pills diuretic and then|In California, due to unfavorable | ‘halse longue and thought of scath- of the total area planted in the|my troubles clear up at once.” Satis-| feed prospects, the movement of| /98 things to write to her father. last 10 years, the following table | faction guaranteed. Sold everywhere. | grass-fed cattle and early lambs will| Pamela sniffed. Then she ‘sat up shows the steady inc in the fc —Adv. be del: ik erect. The elusive odor had grown v: sian Daies sé ered stronger. Where could it be coming rae ve ¥ from? She hadn’t anything like it. had i Tes Placed (around dnvvestieal cans at= OUT OUR WAY é By Williams ingly and ne eye fell upon the string | Wordless, of beads that she had flung from her a moment before. They lay near at hand, showing up plainly against SN-MMPA AAH! MMM MAW! NOBODY C'IN BEAT was, as the childhood saying goes, ting warmer. But there was nothing in sight except the beads. She gave them a closer look and saw that one 3 “3 fi Rigs F 2 ‘ : Z i « B T USED To THinw “MOU WONDERFUL" (i329 fg i #E ga i He pil bl fet i a ital z. 3 gee H g | ir ae 7 BRE i Tickets ; Festival will inclusive, : Hg »,

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