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

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, 6 a . > ro wy oe ay » oe * nN ° | > ~ | io } ~ ma + ‘ SRVERE BLACK RUST GONDITIONS FOUND ~ INNEARBY WHEAT Séction From Edgeley to Na- poleon Expected to Be Cut to Quarter Normal Crop -Black rust has been added to the i effects of the drouth in the wheat situation in one large area of the wae be? of the state east of the lissourl river, accord! to reports from Napoleon. tied ‘The rust infection is reported to be quite extensive in the section be- tween Edgeley and Napoleon. It is Tunning 40 to 50 per cent it is said, the appraisal of the damage being that of government investigators. Other government men are expected lestroying infection if it be in barberry plants, which are accepted as the cause of the rust, ‘The damage done by black rust is nels, The rust saps the strength of the stalks and rote the grain of the kernels. The grain is usable, but undesirable because of its mal- formation. Some Found Around Mandan The Edgeley-Napoleon area is ex- ected to go not over a quarter normal dt ated a rust. At the Mandan federal experiment station little was known of the rust in the southern area. But it was ad- mitted that some rust had shown up| p; in the area around Mandan. It was not comparable to the effect of the drouth, however, it was explained. Whether this year's appearance of the infection is due to barberry plants within the state or from wind- borne spores from elsewhere has be- investigators. Black rust spores: have been found floating as high as 1,000 feet in the air in inves- Pq 5 COLLEGE PRESDENT SUED FOR DAMAGES = ie oh? z 5 il l ij i i f “ BF ES if i Ba: H i | i i gs CANADIAN MANAGING — AMERICAN INDIANS WORLD'S BIGGEST WHEAT POOL. Market One-Fifth of Globe’s! Supply Though Largest Cooperative Enterprise DO NOT ASK FARM RELIEF —_— | Largest and Smallest Produc- ers Have Equal Voice in Conduct of Busniess Toronto, Ont., Aug. 1—(NEA)—The world’s largest grain marketing or- Fay ae net one- ate By and for 138,00 of 8 and tor owner-1 » Through this gigan- tic cooperative ‘associa- tion, Canadian wheat farmers are Prospering. In this country where wheat is flowing gold, there is little clamor for farm relief. Farmers took this prob- Jem into their own hands five years ago and organized this pool. From @ gamble then, it has grown so that last year the central selling agency for the pools of Alberta, Saskatche- wan, Manitoba and Ontario 222,908,000 bushels of wheat at a turn- sptad of here npremgeh or one million dol- Per working day. ‘The Canadian wheat pool consists of three pools, the Ontario pool, four elevator companies and insurance brokerage house. All organizations function with the tral selling organization, the Ca Cooperative Wheat Producers All the wheat as it comes farms at harvest time is country elevators, of which ined resources of the central had 1417 in the Canadian west at the end of 1928 and which is ex; extend to 1608 by the end of combined capacity of is about 52,560,000 bushels. Get Equal Representation Farmer-members of the organiza- tion—every member, excepting the organization's elevators for so many years. Then each farmer is entitled to one vote in the company’s business, no matter whether he is @ large or small producer. Once the grain has been pl the hands of the elevators a: farmers have been given chécks for their wheat, it to terminal elevators of a beaeellfitee Paris, Regina, , Van- couver, Fort William, , Buf falo, Buenos Aires, ten countries, Mexico, Brazil and the orient. Through these agencies con- ecg rsalaprcen nor, Pool Is Run H " 5 t h i 83 83 if i! H ; i #8 ifs Hy | 1 i i olf i f ; i re i i sie gs i | i A z z i “ a : se : 23 tH ii U i : : | i fl i : 2 [ e [ed i iccl iisdie & 2 E | F i i |_ Fargo, N. Dak., Senator J. W. Senator Schnitzler May Cancel Zep Trip} Aug. 1.—()—State | 5 Sniteler of Froid, Mont., an aviation enthusiast, has a reservation for the approaching east- ward flight of the Graf Zeppelin to | Burope, he told she Fargo Forum to- day. Press of the wheat harvest, now {under way at Froid, may force him, however, to cancel his proposed jour- ney, Schnitzler said. BOARD IS SWAMPED WITH APPLICATIONS OF ‘HIGH PRESSURES’ No Professional Promoters Are Wanted, Is Declaration of Farm Body ‘Washington, Aug. 1—(#)—The fed- | eral farm board has decided upon a | determined stand against “profession- | al ’ who have been seek- | ing to “ ” the farmers for; benefits under the agricultural mare | keting act. | ‘The farm board has been swamped with applications for jobs, but the | most persistent of these have been in- | dividuals, some described as “well | meaning evangelists” and others as “high pressure promoters,” who be- Neve they see opportunity for their rag in the newly enacted farm w. To practically all of the coopera- | tive organization promoters, the board membership. ‘The desire of professional promot- ers to “organize” farmers is held by the board to spring frém the knowl- edge that @ great deal of government money is available for loans to co- operatives. ‘The professional promoters are the type of whom the board intends to be most wary. Representations made by them are often adroit and attractive, of protecting the farmer most effectively is expected board members to ve the scattered e: KEEP THEIR PRIDE, COUNCIL IS TOLD! Chief High Eagle Objects to Ac- | tion of the Government in Converting School Rapid City, 8. D. Aug. 1—(™)— The American Indians still retain racial pride and want to be consulted before changes are made in the fed- eral system which concerns them, Chief Robert High Eagle, chairman of the council of American Indians, told the council today. Chief High Eagle named a commit- tee to draft a resolution protesting against conversion of the proposed Rapid City Indian school into a sana- torium for tubercular Indian children. “The old Indian chiefs at the mect- ing Wednesday night were displeased,” Chief High Eagle told the council. “Many years ago the government brought them to Rapid City and showed them the site for the school. The chiefs approved it. “Now they want to change the school to a hospital. They didn't ask the chiefs. That is not right. The chiefs represent the Indians, and the Indians must be considered in mat- ters which concern them, for after all, defeated we may be, but we have an equal right in all things.” Members of the resolution commit- tee are Henry Standing Bear, Clement Whirlwind, Pat Star, James High Hawk, Dan Yellow Earring, and Rich- ard Kitto. Winnipeg-New Orleans Time Is Cut 32 Hours By Air Connections St. Paul, Minn., Aug. 1—(?)—New north and south air-rail passenger connections through St. Paul, cutting the time for passenger travel between ‘Winnipeg to New Orleans from 62 to about 30 hours, were announced today by Norman G. Warsinske, president of a new Canadian American Airlines, Ine. . The new schedules will become ef- fective September 1 with the inaugur- their | ation of service by Continental Air Service. This company completed or- ganization last week in Chicago. ‘Through the new schedule arrange- ment, passengers leaving Winnipeg on the Canadian-American Airlines Plane at 1:15 a. m. Monday would ar- tive in St. Paul about 6 p. m., leave St. Paul by train at 7 p. m., and ar- rive in Chicago at 6:55 a. m. Tuesday; leave Chicago at 8:45 a. m., on Con- tinental Air Service planes, arriving in St. Louis at noon and at New Or- Jeans at 7:40 p. m., Tuesday, just two days earlier than a passenger leaving Winnipeg Monday by rail. SUPPRESS COMMUNISTS Shanghai, Aug. 1.—(AP)—Two minor communist demonstrations in the international settlement today were suppressed quickly by police who had anticipated a much more eventful August first in view of widely advertised Red activities. Remnant Sale at Bismarck’s Busiest Store. - Fresh Lake Fish at Gussner’s. PIKE WHITE 30c 30c Fresh Fish Direct by truck from the Minnesota lakes FISH TROUT 32c GUSSNER’S PHONE 1060 day 1927 Pontiac Coach Late model, excellent condition of care, A bargain at Special Has had the best equipped $475 Motor Co. Seventh and Broadway Bismarck, No. Dak. USI ; Finance Committee _| Raises Oats Tariff Washington, Aug. 1—(#)—The tariff on oats was raised from 15 cents a bushel to 16 cents by Republicans of the senate finance committee today in their revision of the senate finance committee in their revision of the house tariff measure. The rates of 42 cents a bushel on wheat and 25c a bushel on corn pro- vided by the house measure were left unchanged. The house had made no change in the rate on oats. The 25¢ duty on corn is an increase of 10¢ over the present law while the wheat tariff is the same as at present. BATTLE OVER STILL; DEPUTY SHERIFF Is FATALLY WOUNDED Gunfire Meets Officers as They Raid Camp in Mountains; Six Are Arrested Frederick, Md., Aug. 1—()—Deputy Sheriff Clyde Hauver was fatally ‘wounded in a volley of gunfire which met a group of deputies as they raided a still in the mountains west of Thurmont last night. Six sus- pects were arrested. Hauver fell at the first volley fired. His fellow officers returned the fire and the men in the vicinity of the @ large still and 20 vats of 500 gal- lon capacity each. A person on a house roof 100 feet high can see more than 13 miles away on a clear day. On a mountain 1000 feet high a 42-mile view can be had. Aviators a mile up can see everything within @ radius of 96 miles. Sonya Type Dark end mysterious, she has away with her still fled. The raiding party found | ‘BOARD WILL ASS COTTON GROWERS, ISHOPE OF SOUTH Institute of Cooperation Is Told Expansion of Cooperative Marketing Is Goal Baton Rouge, La, Aug. 1—(@}— With first hand information on the cotton farmers’ problems and individ- | ual marketing troubles at the Ameri- ; can Institute of Cooperation in pro- | Bress here, a committee from the fed- | cral farm board headed by Chairman | Alexander Legge returned to Wash- ington today to meet with the entire ‘ a for formulation of farmer poll- | cles, The members of the group, Mr. | Legee, C. C. Teague and Carl wil- liams, accompanied by Secretary of Agriculture Hyde, told the institute that the board would work toward an expansion of cooperative marketing. Today at the call of C. O. Moser, of | Dallas, Texas, president of the Amer- ican Cotton Growers association, trustees of the organization met to select a committce to visit Washing- ton and lay before the entire board for solution the problems of produc- tion, price fluctuation and general depression which has followed the cotton industry since the World war. The federal board group announced | that policies would be formed after | ie cotton committee was given hear- | ings. | eens PARK GETS DEER HEADS Devils Lake, N. D.. Aug. 1.—Lake- | wood park’s administration building | here now has three mounted deer ; heads on its walls. The heads were | the gift to the Devils Lake park board of C. H. Noltimier, Valley City, mem- | ber of the state game and fish com- | mission. | Wingreene Chevrolet , Car Stolen from Back Of No. Pacific Depot Gus Wingreene parked his Chev- | rolet car back of the Northern Pacif- ic depot at 7 o'clock last evening. About 9, when he went for it, there wasn’t a sign of it. He has notified the sheriff's office and the Bena but no word has been received trac- | ing ~ car, which bore license No. 123-193, ROMANTIC PIONEER OF INDIAN WEST DIES jJohn McGowan, 95, Was Last of Dickinson's Civil War Veterans; Funeral Here The Weat yielded up another cf the colorful figures of the war and pioneering periods in the death at 4:15 Wednesday afternoon, at Dick- inson, of John McGowan, 95, soldier, Indian fighter, pony express rider ard last Civil war veteran in the Stark_county capital. McGowan was a former resident of Bismarck and the main funeral service and the interment will be here, Saturday afternoon. The services are to be held at the first Presbyterian church at 2 o'clock. There is to be a firing squad from Fort Lincoln and the American Le- gion will conduct military rites along with the usual religious ob- |sequies. The body will leave Dick- m Friday and arrive here at in the evening, to be held at the Webb chapel till Saturday after- noon. McGowan has two daughters here, (Mrs. J. H. Small and Mrs. Catherine Ferris. Two other daughters, F nie and Ada live in Dickinson, and a sixth is Nrs. H. McLean, ren a great-gra McGowan was born in Ireland, May 24, 1834, He cu:.. over to this country in early youth and when the Civil war broke out he volunteered it vied ee cn from Philadel- phia, serving in mi engage- ments, including Gettysbers. After the war he came west and was stationed at Fort Sully, in what is now South Dakota. He fought in numerous Indian skirm- ishes and rode the e je In 1883 he moved to Bismarck and resided here till 1915, when he mov- ed to Dickinson, Mrs. McGowan died there last winter and was brought here for interment. TNOANE HAN ARMED WITH AXE KILS 8 Spartanburg, 8. C., Aug. 1—()— Three men were killed, two others | Probably fatally wounded, and the entire west end of the city was thrown into confusion here today when T. Earl Robertaon, a shipping clerk, be- coming suddenly insane, ran amuck with a handaxe. The dead are R. H. Day and J. L. Bussey, both railroad employes, JUST A JOY RIDE New York—(AP)—Geraldine Bes- si, Gloria Bacarei, and Harry Engel- hausen, all under 11, took a joy ride on a raft. It started out famously until the raft blew about a mile out into the Atlantic. Harry started swimming ashore for help but be- fore he arrived aid reached them. The raft had blown out into the ocean three miles by the time they were rescued. The first map of the moon was made by Ricciolo, in 1650, who also originated the plan of naming the lunar craters after celebrated astron- [anaes Mrs, Elmer Bell, at Balfour, | omers and philosophers. 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