The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 15, 1929, Page 2

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81G AGRICULTURAL TRACTS VIEWED 70 ACQUIRE NEW IDEAS 1 “Crop Rotation, Eradication of Weeds and Construction of Buildings on Program| GET SLANT ON DAIRYING Also Visit Insurance Company Property and Investigate Tenant Operations Valley City, N.D. July 15—(P}—} Further investigation of the methods | by which North Dakota farmers have scored successes during a time of sen- “eral uncertainty in the farming busi- was on the program for mem- of the Northwest Farm Man- association, who, today, began “the second lap of their ninth annual summer “hunting trip.” ~ ‘The route led through Barnes and ~-La Moure counties, described in the as having the most fer- tile land in the state. The object of the tour is to combine business for the members of the at i owners or operators in this and other states. Leaving Fargo Sunday afternoon, —the tour passed through Cass county | and a number of farms came under the observation of the farm managers. Among them were the National stock farm, the Maple River Farm, the/ stock farm. the farm prop- | erties of. Walter R. Reed and Robert B. Reed and farms owned or oper- Miller, Ralph Powers, Joseph Runck, Dittmer, Carl | and fencing. fashe. wilttarn ‘Watt. ager, plans to specialize in growing Pure bred stock and certified seed. Laske, William Watt, Charles Zaeske, ‘William Zaeske, Otto Zaeska and the Lowman farm at Wheatland. tices were given. At others the in- as by officials of attention to vari- worthy of notice. these were the i methods of rotating and crops so as to keep the good condition. the farms of Walter 5.760 acres and the brothers were pilots for afternoon jaunt. here early this morning Lee as leader, a quack- Y e studied i. J. Olson. * Isley, Isenberger brothers, The Na- 5 clean the land. Highest, Precipi- tation 28 Q |state of 2 weather & HUET Beeaseanssessessasssees qessceesessesesecess Fsescssssssesssseacess i "puepeegenegegggegeeeey I i, | ct ie sheep and hogs and raises no wheat this year. pany farms comprise land taken over by the company because of failure to Fred | Pay loans. been spent in repairs, new building: increase in the livestock and the spections were made from the road | butterfat produced will be divided be- tourists sped along. The route | tween the tenant and the company ‘was planned several weeks | 0n a 50-50 basis, Schnell told the vis- the organization | itors. 7 sub-experiment station at Edgeley, ex- effect of cer-| Plained the tests being carried on rotations, methods of erad-| there and the tourists were served noxious grasses,| With dinner by the Edgeley unit of barns and stock | the American Legion auxiliary. | OUTOUR WAY THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 15. 1929 SIDE GLANCES - - “We haven't that in stock right - - By George Clark ae now, Mrs. Van Scads. I could give | you the same thing with a pale green stripe.” The National Life Insurance com- Approximately $30,000 has H. A. Schnell, man. ‘The farms will be operated by ten- ants, selected by the insurance com- j Pa and the livestock investment be borne by the company. The A. O. Thompson, manager of the ‘Tuesday the tourists will visit vari- ous South Dakota points, stopping at Huron after visiting Aberdeen and Watertown. The tourists will stop to- night at ‘Ellendale. Editor Assumes Post Of Athletic Publicity And Alumni Secretary Fargo, N. D., July 15.—M. E. Tin- dall, Fargo, for the past eight years reporter and telegraph editor on the Fargo Forum, agsumes his new duties with the North Dakota Agricultural . |college as alumni secretary and direc- tor of athletic publicity of that insti- tution. He succeeds T. W. Thordar- son, who will be on full time in charge of correspondence courses in , {the school of agriculture. Tindall is the son of Rev. and Mrs. G. E. Tindall, St. Cloud, Minn., his were those of | father being one of the pioneer min- Dunham, Hansen |isters of the northern Minnesota con. Mrs. George Ragan, Fred |ference of the Methodist Episcopal - ee In 1926 Mr. Tindall married Insurance company farms idred Fraser, daughter of Adjutant Edgeley sub-experiment sta- |General and Mrs. G. mer North Dakota Agricultural col- of these places attention | lege student and graduate of the Uni- ocean apeling Olson | versity of North Dakota. Mr. Tindall} acres of potatoes, planted to|@raduated from the North Dakota Isley specializes in | Agricultural college in 1922. 1 A. Fraser, a for- STARTING YOUNG Dundas, Minn.—If Arthur Bickel’s Political success follows him through @| life he should be president of the United States before he retires. He was elected mayor of this town at the 62| first clection in which he was old enough to vote. LOOT IYYTLUEL LS SLID dn ype Wy Yi eee ty, Sad BiG CITIES LOSING Util view Showing Water Supplies Are Shifting Urban Growth Chicago, July 15—(4)—“America’s study, Prepared by a utilities company, sees the industrial leadership of the big cities passing to the “main streets” of New Fronticr,” an economic the nation. Already the smaller communities are well on the road to economic lead- ership, according to the book, which was prepared by the Middle-West Utilities company of Chicago. The assertions are based on the concern’s experience in 4,000 small communities, government figures tists. Pany or the electricity distributors. More widely distributed power, in- creased usage of the motor car, more flexible freight rates and perfection of labor saving devices are credited with advancing the small community. The increasing difficulties and cost of metropolitan life have reacted up- on industry, the book states, so that industrial leaders have been aroused to the advantages of diffusion. In support of this it quotes Charles Ket- Motors re- search corporation, Carl Alsberg, bak- steel tering, of the General ery expert, and E. J. Kulad, manufacturer. standards. characterized business ent since the industrial eighteenth century England.” carrying 20 tons of water a year. 1F You GIVE THEM AN INCH THEY -TAWE A YAROL 1 BLO THEM “THEY CouLD SLEEP ON THE. PORCH LAST NIGHT AND 100K-AT TAEM— InN, BROAD DAY LIGHT . INDUSTRIAL LEAD ies Company Issues Re-/| j, and supplemented with a study of and economic conclusions of leading social scien- The book regards water resources as determing the ultimate limit of city growth, and rules out—because of la- bor saving machinery—population as a@ measuring stick of productive ca- pacity, purchasing power or living The decentralizing forces at work in America today, the book concludes, are “reversing the current which have revolution of The average homemaker spends 70 per cent of her time in the kitchen, walking from two and a half to 11 miles a day, doing acres of dishes and ALMOST ON THE SIDEWALK ITHEAVY HAIL LOSSES BRING 1,616 CLAIMS Pamenstininenen rg Williams County Heads List! With 452; Total for Sea- son Now Is 3,618 Heavy hail losses occurred through- out North Dakota during the week ending July 12, according to a report by the state hail insurance depart- ment. A total of 1616 claims were re- ported during the week, a new high record for this year. The number of claims reported this season is 3618. Williams county, with 452 claims, led the list. La Moure county report- ed 192, Billings 138, Stutsman 122 and McKenzie 115. Hettinger county fell just short of the century mark with 99 claims. Other counties reported losses as follows: Adams 2, Barnes 27, Benson 13, Bottineau 3, Bowman 14, Burke 13, Burleigh 69, Dickey 3, Divide 28, Dunn 37, Golden Valley 3, Grand Forks 5, Grant 48, Kidder 53, Logan 14, Mc- Henry 1, McIntosh 17, Morton 9, Mountrail 11, Nelson 1, Pembina 1, Ramsey 5, Ransom 22, Renville 5, Richland 1, Sheridan 3, Sioux 22, ny Northwest Farm Managers on State Tour to Entomological Hobby Gets Teacher Post in Alma Mater College Fargo, N. D., July 15.—Hazel Rid- dle, graduate of the North Dakota Agricultural college in 1927 and in- structor in the public schools of Mapleton, N. D., for the past two years, recently received appointment as assistant in the department of entomology under Prof. J. A. Munro, at her alma mater. She will carry on stenographic work in that depart- ment until arrangements can be made to hire a full-time person for that phase of the work. Study Success in Stres’ BETTER MAGAZINES MADE FAR FEATURE Object of Extension Service |: to Improve Reading Mat- ter on N. D. Farms left there, and not several hours later, as he pretended; he left for the Ogden house at once; saw a light in the Og- den library and a sense of danger sent him there instead of to the front door; he overhead A bert —_—_— Jerry the story of his Torridity days, " without, however, disclosing to him| Grand Forks, N. D., July 18 Dillon's’ present identity. MacNair| One of the features of the state f realized if he would preserve his own| opening here today is the “bet! pares % 2 that Peebles intends to convict him of Ogden’s murder. Dillon follows Peebles and is waiting outside the room. Throwing Furie off guard by a ruse, Pee- bles lands a knockout blow on . Furie’s chin. Pretending to plead for mercy, Peebles fires at the Miss Riddle is a Phi Kappa Phi honor student and was interested in entomology while attending college. Her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Riddle, are graduates of the North Dakota Agricultural college. Supreme Court Puts Off Vacation to Work Out Lot of Decisions Summertime may not be vacation time for members of the state su- Preme court here. Chief Justice John Burke said to- day that the judges have agreed not they have cleared the docket of all Stark 57, Walsh 5 and Wells 7. ° Potato Inspection Now Is Available At Shipping Points Fargo, N. D., July 15.—R. C. Hast- ings, previously with the Minnesota Produce inspection service and elected | North Dakota state potato grades in- ; Spector, has recently assumed his du- ties as deputy seed commissioner in charge of the potato inspection and Potato grades service, according to Dean H. L. Bolley, pure seed labora- iy: North Dakota Agricultural col- lege. Grades inspection for potatoes has been available at the large terminal markets for approximately 15 years, states Mr. Bolley. North Dakota, as in the case of approximately 40 other states, has recently passed a law mak- ing inspection service available at Primary shipping point, whereby growers and shippers may learn the standards and correct errors in grad- ing at loading point rather than at destination. Mr. Hastings will be glad to meet with any group interested in this po- tato grades service to explain its use and how it may be obtained. Mail should be addressed to Potato Grades a State College Station, Fargo, Schuylkill Farmers Coming Through Here On Return from Park St. Paul, July 15.—A party of about 60 persons, known as the Schuylkill County Farmers of Pennsylvania, will travel from Portland over the lines of The concern claims the book was|the Northern Pacific to St. Paul, i published for its informative value, and not to propagandize the com- early in August. This party will leave Portland on August 3 for Tacoma, where a side trip to Rainier National Park will be made. August 4, the party will move to jSeattle for a side trip to Vancouver and return. Leaving Seattle August 6, the tourists will detrain at Ellens- burg, making an automobile trip to Prosser, Wash. move to Spokane, where an entire day will be spent before leaving for Yellowstone Ni Park. Enter- ing the Gardiner gateway, they will spend three and one-half days in the Park, leaving via Cody August 13. They will spend several hours at Billings, Mont., and will arrive at St. Paul on the Northern Pacific Yellow- stone Comet at 8:20 a. m., August 15. EDITORS GOING THROUGH St. Paul. July 15.—Editors of Amer- ican papers will be in St. Paul, Au- gust 4, according to E. E. Nelson, pas- Senger traffic manager of the North- ern Pacific. There will be four special ; Pullmans bearing delegates from the National Editorial association con- vention at Cheyenne, Wyo., who will visit Yellowstone national park at the close .of the convention on July 24. They will leave Cody on August 2 and Billings on August 3 for through movement to St. Paul and Chicago on the Yellowstone Comet. By Williams Early on August 8, the party will| . Pending cases. Arguments closed in June and the judges have since been hard at work trying to decide the cases which have been submitted to them. Indications are that they may complete the task by mid-August, in which case they will take a vacation before argu- ments are resumed in September. If the court decides all pending cases and clears its docket it will be the first time such an event has occurred for many years. “We are hired by the people to do this work and the people who have litigation pending here have a right to expect that it will be decided quick- ly,” Burke explained. Buenos Aires Air Line To Aid Lumber Trade to take vacations unless and until | hi life and liberty he must make away | magazines for the home” exhibit fo with Andrew as soon as Jerry had gone. There was no moon and he| ‘Me Purpose of fostering a greater in< easily stood on the little railed-in bal- | terest in the reading of good maga: cony without being seen. sines. The exhibit was planned and “My evidence of this is flimsy. Mac- | arranged by Mrs. Jane Gavere of the Za Nair was having a stucco sunroom | University of North Dakota extension built on to his bungalow. I found | division. traces of plasterer’s cement on his| “The widespread reading of trashy shoes and a deposit of it on the bal-| and salacious magazines which glut our newsstands, ly by our den was entered | young people, has for some time been before dawn the next morning. I am | causing concern to parents, teachers, not sure why MacNeir wanted the | librarians and others interested in the Pistol I had bought from Hyde and | moral and intellectual welfare of our which he had overheard Jerry and | youth,” Mrs. Gavere said. Andrew talking about. Promoting “better idea of @ message suggested itself. As | magazines for the home,” she said, is it happened, I went in and caught | to counteract and eventually reduce MacNair. We struggled. Lucy and | to the minimum their sale and read- Mrs. Moffit came as I was about done| ing. A more general acquaintance for. McNair took himself off, pre-| with magazine publications permits tended to collide with some one out- | better discrimination in the selection side, fired a couple of shots through | of good magasines, Mrs. Gavere said. his hat, and returned. And then Mac- | Good magazines, for young people and Nair.made another mistake. He said | for their elders, in the home to the he was in the Ogden grounds and that | point of saturation prove most effec- he heard me call out. tive in blotting out interest in and did not call out. MacNair and Ij eliminating time for reading trashy fought in silence. magazines, she explained. “Item four—Polyandria followed me| The exhibit includes several hun- into the den. Somehow, she got|dred magazines arranged in groups tangled up between us. I heard her | according to interest and subject mat- yowl and I was sure she lashed out| ter. Posters indicate the nature of with a paw. After the struggle I] the magazines included in each unit. found a tiny drop of blood congeal-| On Tuesday, which is Children's ing on one of her claws. She hadn't | day at the fair, there will be a special scratched me, so she must have drawn | exhibit of juvenile magazines. Evalu- blood on my opponent. ation talks including items of inter- “There was a scratch on MacNair's | est about various jazines will be right wrist. “He at once pulled up his| given daily and advicé on the selec- sleeve and showed it to me—obviously | tion of magazines for adults and chil- to disarm suspicion. dren will be available so that the “Item five—MacNalr examined the | home may have the best magazines cartridges before I did. A few min-| for the largest number at the least ceiling, groans and slumps to the floor. Dillon crashes into the reom, wheels in surprise at Pee- bles’ voice, tries to shoot him but Peebles’ gun is the quicker. Dil- lon drops dead—Dillon, who is Luther MacNair. CHAPTER 47 “A SIMPLE ACT OF JUSTICE” Jerry gave me something to drink and I felt better. “Quite a family party,” I remarked acidly. “Can't a man keep an ap- pointment without half a dozen peo- ple chasing after him?” “He might have killed you, Uncle John!” Lucy wailed, pressing me to er again. “Mmn,” I said grimly. “I suppose it was you who got Deacon to come.” “How did you know it was Mac- Nair, John?” Henry asked humbly. “You'd have known it was Mac- Nair, too, if you hadn’t had your eyes elsewhere.” Henry flushed. I felt sorry for him and I turned my attention to Nathan Hyde, who had been eyeing me with an ironic grin., “Still looking for that mine trans- fer, Hyde?” I demanded. That ruffled his smoothness a pit, but he replied suavely enough, “No, ‘we were looking for you, Peebles,” and he chuckled. “See here, Uncle John!” Jerry cut in unceremoniously. “You were sup- by “Thanks for the comparison, Jerry,” I said modestly. “Holmes took himself the role of Watson as a ter of expediency.” upon mat- the opening of the New York, Rio and Buenos Aires air line, which will make Tampa its southern United States ai a It will bring lumber shippers in closer contact with their South Amer- ican market, according to L. N. Dants- ler Jr., Argentina’s consul Mere and vice president of a Tampa exporting “You mean you knew all along that MacNair killed Andrew!” Henry ex- claimed. “Well, since the day after it hap- pened,” I admitted. “But my evi- dence was incomplete. I didn’t believe utes later, when I called his attention | cost. to the “er sti ve that roe the note, he pretended he had ni seen them. ‘That was nonsense. He| Call for North Dakota couldn't have helped seeing them. 5 7 held up the itle red notebook. Information on Cows “Item six—some of my conclusions are ‘written here, When Mecnar| Comes from England and I were in my den Saturday night, ——e I put the notebook down on my desk| Fargo, N. D., July 15.—That news and left the room fora minute or two.|items sent from the North Dakota When I returned I found the book | Agricultural college are picked up by had been disturbed—as I had ex-|people in all parts of the world is pected. I wanted MacNair to know I illustrated by a letter received from “Item One,” I began. believed him guilty. England by Dr. J. H. Shepperd, chair- “Today is Tuesday. Jerry left his| “Item seven—Sunday morning Mac-|man of the animal hus! de- Nair stopped his car at my house and {partment at the college. The letter told me he was going to Los Angeles. |runs as follows: I purposely glanced at his speed-| “In the June number of The Couns ometer. It registered 6,825 miles. Last |try Gentleman, page 60, there is a night, after the car was supposed to|short article over your name, dealing have covered a distance of 250 miles, | with some 18 years’ results from 1755 it registered’7,010 miles—an increase |cows. Is it possible for you to let me of only 185 miles. MacNair went to|have any more information detailed Torridity to plant,Jerry’s flannels. regarding these results as it is @ sub- “Items eight and nine—last night I| ject in which I am particularly in- telephoned on old colleague of mine|terested? (Signed) James Wyllie, in Los Angeles and asked him to get | advisory economist of South-Eastern 5 it M Hit i KEREB EE LESSER ie EE | : Le 1 Ht é 4 : | iat i TH gE information I wanted. He called me ‘icultural college, vereit back this morning. He told me, first: ey ‘Wyke, Kent. oS on “That MacNair was involved in the| Dr. Shepperd made immediate re- ives eee om that he nee ply to the request, giving all return b lore the end of ti this week or face a criminal court ac- EERO OAR ee ee X-RAY EYES Fl ge Re Rg oo. He demanded $100,000 of An- Ww. “Second: That MacNair was dis- potealng the Flinkerton es agency years ago for acct a bribe of $10,000. sai att : F in FL et i i ; E Z | i i 5B rl clinched the case against MacNair is in tomorrow's chapter. Over three hundred years ago crude submarine, to be propelled Oars was constructed in England un. der the reign of James I. This of no value other than a curiosity. : | E i 3 5 i HH k | 8 & ; gf. i z i i é i [ i i s s NOTICE OF PETITION a | ‘TION OF PART OF tte i Notice Is He m | the 4th day of Saxe, 1990 thane eee | filed in the office of the cit of the city of Bismarck kota, a veritied petition for t tion of the South halt lof the sou! Fier atin ttc Sele North Dakot ing fort and reasons for suc! Poe ea Re on tion of said alley ; ai Petition is that tl iam eletee le et as developing the same for tesiaat { Ogoo0Gco ooog oaaG Continued “ie. Will ‘gtestie 4 oon ogog oo th ot “the currsunding B00 uane Goo Bo decent ft cl aO oogg Gog ooo Joesting to pe held ea go00u8 Oo oaagg ‘ Asis, "at the goog DOW OnOO0R en wil n evidence a an; tl saescae nan ane, f Z| ma} Frenting” of sald petition or ths dos | ted this 27th dey of June, 193% (Seal ‘i wésisa igi jaa. al NOTICE OF §j { eitsoner =o State of North Dakote, County of a Court, Fourth Judicial Dis« Lo satisty » amounting to opether, with ait Sete sale, and inte: on the bith aay of Funes 3 ‘at the te Tee to the. Lee Wane a, pees Tee Le] ; 4 mont Gol Lee eee

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