The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 29, 1929, Page 6

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HELP IN ECONOMY | DRIVE BY HOOVER: Safe, Sound Program of Na- - tional Defense Will Be the Yardstick of Reforms Washington, July 29.—()—Back t from a week-cnd conference with President Hoover at his Virginia fishing retreat, Secretary Good said | today the entire army general staff | would devote its cnergics to the sur- | vey of military expenditures desired by the chief executive with a view of | effecting economics. “A safe, sound program of national L) defense will be the yardstick by which all economies must be measured,” the secretary announced. L Explaining that in no specific branches of the service had it been found that definite deductions might be made, he said reports of curtail- ment of the Citizens’ Military ‘Train- ing camps. the national guard, and | reserve officers training camps were “figments of the imagination.” "aoe | is shown reposing on a scales; net t! Dickinson Man Shows | ca ° %, . ! i Duckfoot Cultivator | pean o WV ribune Special Service) | n Dickinson, N. D., July 29. —More | B than 100 farmers and wives of Slope | bi county visited the Dickinson experi- | mental station near here Saturday af- | g ternoon and particularly were inter- , ir ected in the experiments with the w duckfoot cultivator for summer fal- | By NEA Service tt lowing which Leroy Moomaw, su-| Cleveland, ©., July 29.—Why should perintendent, has made in the last six;men during the hot summer months N be forced by custom to drip and st the duckfoot method gave ;droop under the fardels of outrageous te Ids of wheat than land that |ratment, while the fair sex cavoi t wed, Mr. Moomaw told them. |about in backless and sleeveless cre Land which was fallowed by the duck- | ations? dc foot only and had not been plowed| Why should not the tired business tr since 1923, actually produced a high-iman cast off the trousers that en- eld of wheat than land which | velop him from hip to ankles in favor de plowed in 1927 and during the |of something like track pants? Coats, Be rest of the season kept frce of weeds | vest, suspenders, shirts, hose, ties and in hy use of the duckfoot. |shoes—all of them heat containers— The cost of cultivating with the; make men walking furnaces in warm or duckfoot will run about 40 to 45 cents | weather, and doctors say light ‘and it an zere for cach time, while with | Well-ventilated clothing means better hi plowing the cost is around $2 per {health when the days are hot. D acre. The duckfoot method has been! A weight contest conducted here 4 found not only cheaper but better. |shows that the clothing men wear Be The cultivator will take care of the|Wweighs about six times that of the field for about 25 per cent less cost /gitlies, The ladies consider them- ~SEEE°SS 82282. BB 3 o ee route to Tacoma to which they were Fo called by Bromley after the accident. Ph “I am sorry that he isn't on his | 36 way as I wanted him to get there and Ph tome back quickly,” Mrs. Bromley Jan said. She received word of the crash Co while visiting her sister at Clinton, Ia. lias Mrs. Bromley said she is anxious for the plane to be rebuilt and the i transpacific flight started. Naturally, rd she said, she is worried about it and fal: yet she is eager for her husband's | me success. 23 . | exe Robbers Steal Winter mmo Overcoats in Summer a than plowing. If the work can be done before the weeds become too high and when the soil is dry, he told them, the duck- foot is the only implement necessary. | When the soil is excessively packed, infested with grass, stony or con- taining tough rooted perennials, he advised the use of a plow to summer fallow. There also is the possibility that occasional plowing may be nec- essary with continued use of the duckfoot over a period of years, he concluded. The farmers also were shown the experiments being conducted with wheat, forage crops and fruit of various kinds. Mrs. Bromley Leaves For Tacoma When She| Learns Flight Fails! en | Devils Lake, N. D., July 29.—(7)— | Disappointent that her husband's at- | tempt to fly from Tacoma, Wash., to | Tokyo, had met with mishap was | expressed here today by Mrs. Harold | Bromley, wife of the man who pro- | Posed to fly the Pacific. | Mrs. Bromley and her small son | Passed through Devils Lake today en | |selves fully garbed with slightly over Chicago, July 29.—#\—Four rob-/ brador, represents part of the work d bers picked out one of the hottest! place as a “land pa the future.” and it is to develop the natives into | employable citizens against the com- | ing of industry. Following Long Illness weight, one pound and three ounces. x ke 8 It’s no secret that women have all the luck when it comes to hot weather wearing apparel—and here's a picture layout that proves the point. At the left is Miss Ethel South of Cleveland, garbed as any modern young woman is garbed on a hot day. * * * Men’s Summer Apparel Is Six Times as Heavy as That of Flappers, But What Can the Male Do About It and Still Retain His Dignity? tote in excess of seven pounds. | Take shoes, for instance. A man ‘has to have 2% pounds of hard leath- er wrapped around his fallen arches to feel presentable. The ladies wear sandals that you have to have weighed in a jewelry store. A man must encase himself in at least 3°, pounds of wool or what looks like wool to fecl dressed. A girl picks out six ounces of frilly silk, put together in such .a fashion that breezes can casily wander through, puts a gram of powder on her nose and is well frocked. In far away London a Men's Dress Reform Party has been organized backed by several physicians. They hope to change the clothing habits along the lines recently adopted by the ladies and they assert all the hard working gents will feel much better if they get rid of the heavy clothes. A hospital (above), shown in its bleak setting at Indian Harbor, La- | estined to prepare Labrador for its ‘ i nel ey ker to that end is Sir Wil. | ‘UrY #80 August 8, the first locomotive | even Europe. These factors, natural resources and availability, are de- stined to draw industry to that region, And so a part of the energies of the International Grenfell association is being directed specifically to pre- | pare the natives, mostly descendants | of early settlers from Scotland and | England, against that time. anc days of the year to steal $20,000 | fred Grenfell, shown below with t for worth of overcoats today. They ob- * ee ze iio ee) la tained their loot at the west side plant | Boston, July 29—/P—An unusual pol RN alg ed te Mare, ater race against time is in progress among org: compelling him to punch his clocks at | the scattered settlements of Labra- | he asserts and regular intervals. The robbers took | dor. ; ae an even 200 coats, valued at $100 each. | It is an cducational race, accord- | fel & 5 ing to Dr. Harry L. Paddon. co-worker | yeaa! Wife of Merchant Dies jin Labrador of Sir Wilfred Grenfell, Cleveland Life Extension Clinic. fa-' vors the idea and suggests masculine \Summer apparel should consist of \light linen trousers, a shirt and sandals, Herbert Barrier. reporter for the Knoxville News - Sentinel, decided to start a one-man crusade there to give the cold shoulder to hot weather clothing. Herbert came to work the other day in what you might call a de luxe track suit and a smile. In a sheer rayon sleeveless shirt, Boy Scout Pants and a straw hat, the young re- Porter, inquiring but not perspiring, wended his way to work—and got a |g0od crowd wherever he went. Herbert found the men ready to laugh, but did not score by so much as the removal of one spotted vest. | He found the men ready to tell one another how hot it: was, and how & pound of clothing, while the men Dr. Philip Lindsay, head of the! they would like to be fishing or in Labrador Folk Prepare for Future Under Guidance of Wilfred Grenfell | August 8, anniversary of the first model of the locomotive is housed * * * Washington. July 23—/P—A cen-| operated in the western hemisphere, | the famous “Stourbridge Lion.” clat- | tered over hemlock rails protected by | | strip iron. \ ; As the hundred-year anniversary | Passes in transportation history, the | Country sees a new epoch begin with she “iron horse” teamed with aircraft | 4S an auxiliary. Where today the continent is spanned in the slender space of 48 In the next picture Miss South's clothing Next we have the average man’s summer clothing—which, if you'll notice, weighs one ounce over seven pounds. The last picture shows the hot weather garb devised by Herbert Barrier, a Knoxville (Tenn.) newspaper re- It’s cool, all right—but when Barrier tried wearing it to work he found out it just wouldn't do. | Here’s How They Rode 100 Years Ago lron Horse Centenary Beginning of Rail-and-Aerial Era Devils Lake, N. D., July 29.—()— Mrs. J. Goldberg, whose husband operates furniture stores in Devils Lake, Jamestown, Minot and Aber- deen, Wash., died at her home here today after a long illness. Funerat and burial services will be held to- morrow at Grand Forks. “Labrador is a country of the fu- ture,” Dr. Paddon explains, speaking with an authority born of years of ob- servation and service in that little known land. Back of the granite shell of the coast are vast forests, great rivers and waterfalls, one of them having five “It is another Alaska.” | | _ Hospitals have been established, and | hours, the little engine chugged along | agriculture and trades have been | ®t four miles an hour. taught. The epochal trip was made from Boys and girls of promise are chos- | Honesdale, Pa. with Horatio Allen, en each year for specialized training | €ngineer of the Delaware and Hudson in the United States, Canada and | Canal company, at the throttle. England. They return to carry for-| The engine, with a gigantic lion's | ward the advancement of their coun- | head painted on the front, coursed | try. three miles into woods towards Car- Besides her husband she leaves five sons and one daughter. They are Arthur and Allen, Devils Lake; Harry Dr. times the head of water of Niagara. There are big mineral deposits, iron, copper and possibly precious metals, Furthermore, he points out, Labra- dor is not a far away place. As general superintendent of the whole, Sir Wilfred, himself a master mariner, travels from place to place in the hospital steamer Strathcona IT. He includes in his stops tiny settle- | ments where mailboats never call and © Paddon asserts, Tt is bondale, Pa.. part of the time over a | wooden trestle, and was reversed for | the return journey. The test run revealed that the tracks were too weak to support the Seven-ton locomotive. Another run within convenient shipping distance where his visit may be the big event Was made September 8, 1829, after New Business Stunt | By London Beauties Londen, June 29—(#)—Slim, slick, begutiful ledies, who dance divinely, Reve established 2 Sew prstection i from Canada, the United States and English Phone Books Bar Ads for Liquor Jenden fave ‘ben ar adver- tisements have been barred from England’s telephone books. They will be absent henceforth also from post- office buildings and the covers of books of stamps, all of which will result in an annual loss to the gov- ernment of about $100,009 in adver- tising revenue. The postmaster eral explained Sipatte of giving’ offense’ to’ ct giving fense rege sections of public opinion ought: not to pa. recanted, The post cffice controls not onl; the mails, but all telephone ani telegraph lines, . Light Rays Are Used | To Counteract Sunburn of the year. which the “Lion” was discarded. i ne been originally intended that Heath : 4 in | the engine would hau! trains of coal | solar speetrum, but parts of it. - || The burning rays of the sun. that | bets about the condition called sun- | aregtanete ¢ Cotas. Uns late | atment st , | | sets tj consists of using another | Boon mire wien Me | These rave oot @ resemblance, they said. | x | If a hoax, those who examined the turtle said, the perpetrator had ; and in as short a ti are seid to have halted the burning | not lived to know the outcome, The violet | inscription had been made years | ago. , New England Hunters Like Wily Woodchuck Augusta, Me—(#)—The humble | Indi: is— (AP) se it : Boone, 4g Ny, Y, a | get into the studio?” ARMY STAPP WL, [tention en Ree tis mnne PLANTING OF TREES xe * some cool cellar partaking perhaps of cheese and nectar, but not one double-breasted coat came off. He discovered that the male, over- dressed in dog days and all, prefers to persist in his ignorant, doltish ways, rather than to free himself of the shackles of a stifling disguise. Another important revelation of Barrier's crusade was that while the girls dress coolly to look like hot stuff, the men dress warmly, talk heatedly and look terrible. In other words, the reception that Herbert got was so chilling that he had to go home and put on a couple of ulsters to kecp himself from being frost-bitten. It's illogical for the men to wilt under seven pounds of clothes while the best dressed flappers wear about @ pound. and something should be done about it. But what’ | URGED ON STATE AS GREATEST NEED NOW Federal Forester Tells of Bene- fits and Protection and | Shows Slides The poetry and prose of tree cul jture were presented to the Lions Iclub luncheon, today, in a vivid ap-| peal for tree planting in North Da-| kota, by H. N. Wheeler, lecturer of the forestry bureau, from Washing- ton, with the result that the club was figuratively swept off its feet and a general clamor was made for the return of Mr. Wheeler to give | his talk in a larger hall. | The tree talk dealt with forest fires, wild life, fishing and outing, but | with all this element of adventure and sentiment went a strain of dol- lars and cents practicality, showing that trees pay by their service and by their timber. Pennsylvania Good Example Pennsylvania was held up as the great example of handling the tim-! ber problem in all its phases, with the result that that great lumber Producing area of years ago is be- ing replanted to be that again, while at the same time erosion is being solved and the greatest wild life state in the union has been created. The plea was made that North Dakota could with advantage turn some of its land into timber with more profit than to sow it to wheat at depressed prices. Napoleon had that done on the coast of France early in the nineteenth cc iury and by the time of the world \ar, which it helped to win, a timber growth worth $100,000,000 had been created there, said Mr. Wheeler, : It Pays Big Timberland created out of eroded wastes Las been found in Tennessee, said Mr. Wheeler, to produce timber stands capable of returning $11.81 an acre. If this same policy were pursued along the Missouri, said the forester, the peak of the annual Mississippi flood would be reduced five feet. , Every large tree transpires about cight barrels of water a day, said Mr. Wheeler. Every tree planted in North Dakota thus will aid in lessen- ing semi-arid conditions in this state. The water is pulled up out of the soil by the roots and passes upward and out through the foliage. Where there are no trees, some acres lose 40 tons of soil a year— washed away into the streams. Roosevelt reservoir in Arizona has filled up 12 per cent with silt. By the time congress gets through talk- A century of steam transportation in the United States will be marked Tun of the “Stourbridge Lion” A in the Smithsonian Institution, ** * Dawns With ing about Muscle Shoals dam, that water structure will be about filled up with id the lecturer. Pelts Make Swamps Pay Non-tillable land and swamps can be made more valuable by leaving them to breeding wild life. Musk- rats in marsh lands are known to have produced 6000 pelts a year on 80 acres, with the pelts $1.50 each, Can you ri with equal returns? Wheeler. The terrible toll of forest fires was presented. Most of them seem to be produced by cigar and cigarette berg sat minierees inane carelessly aside or by camp fires left burni: Mr. Wheeler sat. ne ,_ In Idaho ash trays must be carried in automobiles. In California smok- ing is forbidden in the forests, un- less done at filling stations. Some years ago 432 lives were lost at Moose Lake, Minn., in a forest fire, Outdoor Sport Makes Timber Pay Speaking of the returns from for- ests, Mr. Wheeler said 500,000 peo- ple paid $15,000,000 into the Penn- Sylvania state treasury in one year in license fees for wild life sports. In South ‘ota 2,000,000 Chinese Pheasants raised by means of ref- uges were killed last year. The va- cation visitors to the national parks last year totaled 25,000,000, At the same time 40,000,000 acres of tim- ber were wasted by fires, Trees also are a protection against cyclones. Some pictures were shown to illustrate this. They also protect bird life and reduce insect pests with which the. farmer is bondale, Pa., to the western terminus | plagued. of a canal, a distance of 16 miles. The canal, completed in 1828, extended 108 miles from Honesdale to Rondout, N. Y., on the Hudson river, thus provid- ing a water route from New York city to the valuable anthracite field of northeastern Pennsylvania. The locomotive was designed and built by Foster, Rastrick and Com- Pany of Stourbridge, England, and delivered in New York at a cost of $2,914.90. Three other locomotives were pur- chased at the same time, the “Amer- ica,” “Delaware,” and “Hudson.” Be- cause of the weak track, designed for three-ton engines, all four were dis- carded. At the time the “Stourbridge Lion” was run, not a single railroad steam locomotive ever had turned a wheel or run on any track in the United States, and even in England the su- Periority of engines to the horse was not generally recognized. The “Lion,” after its second run, was housed in a temporary shed where it rusted until parts were dismantied and used in company shops. Some were rescued and deposited in the psi page cheers including the ler, a cylinder, ® “grasshopper beam,” and the wheel rims. the | Incredulous Queries Stump Radio Offices San Francisco— (AP) —Strange requests reach the ears of telephone operators in Paci coast radio One of the strangest, so far, was the lilting voice of a woman asking to speak to a sailor aboard a ship somewhere. Others ask for copies of the “magazine of the air,” a weekly broadcast feature. Some want to know what the air-line is from point to point, while others want to talk to the person before the microphone. And always there is the constant query, “How can I Picture slides illustrating how re- forestation is being carried on showed tree planting on the sand hills of Nebraska, The same course was urged for North Dakota, Guests Give Among. guests at the luncheon PALACE MANDAN Tonight - Tuesday Night 7315 - 9:15 — 25c - 50¢ RAMON NOVARRO Hear Him Sing Also All Talking Comedy Tonight - Prize and Family Night $1.00 Admits Entire Fam- ily to See This Show. [were Mrs, Clara Conger, mother of! i'tot” Conger, of the Grand Pacific, Fano is from Prairie da Sac, Wis.;) EMH and Louella Halve i Mondovi, Wis, sisters of Henr: verson of the GB, the three of | chen joining with the brother in a avartet of song. while Mrs, Conger | gave some dialect readings, | ‘Other guests wore PLE. Cobb, of the Bottineau forestry school; J. M. ‘Stevens of the Great Plains experi: | went and J. HW. Newton, Mandan; A, M. Christianson and Alex Bur latter introduc: i the speaker; Dr, Smith, pre: dont of the Mandan Lions, and Hi ry Mutehler, local arboriculturist, OO ! Additional Markets | oe - BOSTON WOOL Boston. Ju 29...) —Wools: 56's | and 48 50's grade selling about as goon as moderate quantities are ac- cumulated from current — grading | operations. Receipts at Boston dur- | ing the week ending July 27, amount- | ed to 10,329,500 pounds as compared | with 8.457.200 pounds during the | Previous weck. FARGO LIVESTOCK Fargo. N. D., July 29.—(4)—Live- stock market. steers and yearlings 12.00 to 13.00; medium steers 11.00 to 12.00; fair cents per pound and down. 9.00 to 10.00; fair heifers 8.00 to 9.00; | plain heifers 6.00 to 8.00. Good cows | 9.00 to 9.50; meduim cows 8.25 to 8.75; | fair cows 7.25 to 8.00; plain cows 6.25 | to 7.00 and cutters 5.50 to 6.00. Good bulls 8.50 to 9.00; medium bulls 8.00 to 8.50; fair bulls 7.50 to 8.00; com- | mon bulls 6.50 to 7.50. | Sheep. top lambs 11.25 to 12.25; | heavy lambs 9.50 to 10.50; cull lambs | 8.00 to 9.00. Light ewes 130 Ibs. and down 5.00 to 6.00; heavy ewes 150 Ibs. and up 3.50 to 4.50; cull ewes 1.00 io| 3.00. Bucks 3.00 to 4.00. Calves, top veal 13.50 to 14.50; | medium veal 12.00 to 13.00; cull veal | 10.00 to 11.00; heavy calves 7.00 to 9.00; canned calves 6.00 to 7.00. | Hogs, 140 to 200 Ibs. 10.75 to 11.25; | 200 to 225 Ibs. 10.75 to 11.05; 225 to 250 Ibs. 10.55 to 11.05; 250 to 300 Ibs. 10.00 to 10.65; 300 lbs. and over 9.40 to 10.00. Packers 8.75 to 9.05; stags 8.75 to 9.00 and feeders 8.00 to 10.75. STANDARD OIL CLOSES { New York, July 29.—()—Standard Oil Co., of Indiana, closed at 53 3-8. NEW STAMPS" Prague.— () — President Masaryk’s features, which appear on postage stamps of Czechoslovakia, will be re- | placed in the next issue with heraldic | designs. These include the arms of the | heights through Cattle, choice steers | and yearlings 13.00 to 14.00; good | Wisconsin. steers 10.00 to 11.00: plain steers a) heifers 10.00 to 11.00: medium heifers |' divisions of the country--Bohe, mia, Silesia, Moravia, Slovakia an@ Carpathian Ruthenia. five «THO FOUND DEAD IN REFRIGERATOR CAR Minot. N. Dak, July 29.—()—Two men, both believed to be transient labor were found dead in a re- frigerator car at Berthold carly to- day, One of the two is believed to be Guy Cottingham of Detroit, Mich. and the identity of the other has not been determined. Belief that the two men might have | died as a result of poison drink was expressed by Deputy Sheriff R. W. Kennard of Minot, who with C. B. Davis, acting coroner, went to Ber- thold to conduct an inquest beginning at two o'clock this afternoon. More Than 200 Men Fight Forest Fire Wabeno, Wis., July 29.—(7)—More than 200 men today fought two rap- idly spreading forest fires in northern LONG TESTIMONY Melbourne.—(?)—R. J. Matheson, § witness for the locomotive engineers union, occupied the chair {n the Aus- tralian industrial arbitration court for 32 days and e 2,000 pages of testimony. He told the court all about the union's contentions for higher wages, better working conditions, and alleviation of grievances. First ‘Gate Crasher’ By Air Is Rebuffed London—(AP)—The first “gate- crashing” by airplane ended in a rebuff. ‘ Nigel Norman, amateur aviator of Heston, and a friend were flying over the Cottesmore country when hey saw a group of planes on the ground They ia a down to see what it was all about. When they alighted, owners of the assembled machines stiffly in- quired their names and why they were there, The intruders were in- formed that this was a private air- | plane party and uninvited guests | were not welcome. The unintention- al “crashers” apologized in som confusion for their breach of eti- quette and departed. “We left so quickly,” said th companion, “that we literally ‘rei zoomed’ our journey.” a favorite American grain, wholesome corn has climbed to new of popularity the matchless flavor and crispness of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes: 12,000,000 daily enjoy delicious Kellogg’s. Kelloggs CORN FLAKES tk Always look for the rede and-green pachage. ACCEPT NO - SUBSTITUTES Look for the name Goets Country Club on the bottle % fi

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